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Posts Tagged ‘PowerShot’

Canon announces Japan-only special-edition PowerShot S120 and G16

15 Oct

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Canon has announced special edition versions of its PowerShot G16 and S120 digital compact cameras. The ‘premium’ versions appear to be intended for the Japanese domestic market, and will be available in different color finishes, with a custom engraving option. Color customization appears to comprise the option of red, gold, silver and black finished on select components and both cameras are supplied with unique accessories – a cowhide leather pouch for the S120 and a leather hard case for the G16. Click through for pictures.

News: Digital Photography Review (dpreview.com)

 
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Canon PowerShot S120 real-world samples

07 Oct

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Canon’s new 12MP PowerShot S120 arrived in our Seattle office a few days ago and we’ve created a small gallery of samples, taken in a range of different conditions to show off what the camera can do. The PowerShot S120 features a 24-120mm (equivalent) zoom lens which starts at F1.8 at the wide end. We’ve got more content on the way, but for now, check out our gallery of pictures.

News: Digital Photography Review (dpreview.com)

 
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Canon Powershot N Review

06 Oct

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You never know in this reviewing game: one day it’s a DSLR, then a MILC, rapidly followed by a compact camera. Each with its own attractions, each with its own foibles … but few that really break convention very much.

Then, suddenly, the door bangs open and in comes a crazy, ground-breaking innovation. Is it a pack of cards, ciggies or business card holder?

NOTA: none of the above!

It’s Canon’s entry into the fashion world of desirable gadgets.

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Canon Powershot N Features

Gone is the usual myriad of external controls. Absent are cascading viewfinder menu options. Gone is a top-mounted viewfinder. Missing is a comprehensive instruction manual … in its place is a pamphlet ‘Getting Started’ with the instructions covering only one side of the A3 paper. Oh and there’s a CD with a more elaborate instruction manual in linked files.

Before heading out on a shooting spree I suggest you thoroughly immerse yourself in either or both! Don’t want to be caught with your shutter down in the wild outdoors! For one thing, the camera is ‘driven’ by touch screen operation and well implemented it is too. But manual controls? De nada!
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In construction, the camera is a fold out job to form an L shape; with screen swung 90 degrees outwards, the l8x zoom lens faces forwards, protruding some 18mm. So you hold the camera facing forward to take pictures with the screen facing upwards …or you can fold the screen back onto the body and hold it like a normal camera. In either configuration, outdoors the screen washes out.

Want to zoom? Simply rotate a metallic ring at the front of the camera body and just aft of the lens itself.

At this stage I have to warn you that holding the camera is a little nerve-wracking. For one, it’s tiny. It’s light. And there are no handholds that you usually find on DSLRs or many compacts, so you’re on your own. There are two lugs, one one either side of the camera so I suggest you string some sort of neck-bearing strap to prevent you dropping the little beast!

One note: the camera accepts micro cards: microSD, microSDHC and microSDXC. So that will be your first buy before you head out shooting.

My usual habit with a new camera to review is to fire up and start shooting straightaway. But the N floored me right at the starting gate. Having a touch screen I saw a large red button at left, tapped it and the N began video recording. Gave up on the stills front.

I scanned the external controls. At left is the power button.
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On the right edge, a tiny toggle that swings between normal shooting and creative mode. The latter shoots a bracket of five shots bearing different treatments: washed out; underexposed; diffused top and bottom of shot (1200×1200 pixels); centre enlarged; edges whited out. A lot of fun!

Lower down is a mobile device connect button. The N offers integrated Wi-Fi and one-touch connectivity to smartphones or tablets.

Then, beneath that is the replay button and the card slot.

Forward of the lens ring is another ring which gives you manual control of the camera: focus confirmation and shutter firing.

Front of camera: at the top right corner is a tiny clear button. Waffor? It’s the flash. Believe me!
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The menu options are minimal, allowing control of the touch shutter, AF, the stabiliser etc. You can also choose shooting modes that include Miniature Effect, Soft Focus, Toy Camera Effect and Monochrome.

There’s a novel option that commands the camera to shoot a four second movie before every still shot resolution. Sort of a ‘behind the scenes’ video of your still shooting efforts!
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And that’s about it.

The 12.1 megapixel CMOS captures a maximum image size of 4000×3000 pixels, enough to make a 34x25cm print.

Full HD video at 1920x1080m pixel resolution can be shot. No, you can’t shoot stills mid video recording.

Startup Times

About a second from startup to first shot; under a second per shot from then on.

Distortion

No problems.

Canon Powershot N ISO Tests

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I made four attempts to shoot my favourite orange/bicarb and vanilla. AF was the problem… it just wouldn’t lock in.

Eventually, I managed to shoot the run from ISO 80 to 6400. The sharpness and lack of noise was OK up to ISO 1600. At ISO 3200 sharpness fell off noticeably; noised still quite low. At ISO 6400 sharpness had dropped noticeably but noise was still low.

Thinking that my efforts were suffering from operator error or newbie complex, I shot a test shot at ISO 6400 outdoors. Perfect. Sharpness 100 per cent. I can only put it down to the camera’s general unhappiness with AF at close quarters.

Canon Powershot N Review Verdict

Quality: about average.
Why you’d buy it: glam cam!
Why you wouldn’t: fiddly for experienced photographers.

The N is available in white or black.

I found some aspects of the N quite irritating: for one, the lens and shutter rings are easily perplexing … I often found I had to do a visual check to find either.

Pick up the camera and I often did not know which way was up.

Despite this, the N is the perfect companion for the smart phone set and has obvious ambitions to surpass the latter’s picture taking prowess. Doubt it will tho’!

Canon Powershot N Specifications

Image Sensor: 12.1 million effective pixels.
Metering: Multi pattern, centre-weighted, spot.
Exposure Modes: Auto, Program AE.
Sensor: 11mm CMOS.
Lens: f3.0-5.9/5-40mm. 35 SLR equivalent: 28-224mm.
Shutter Speed: 15 to 1/2000 second.
Memory: microSD/microSDHC/microSDXC.
Image Sizes (pixels): 4000×3000 to 640×480. Movies: 1920×1080, 1280×720, 640×480, 320×240.
LCD Screen: 7.1cm LCD (461,000 pixels).
File Formats: JPEG, MPEG4.
Continuous Shooting: 2.3 fps.
ISO Sensitivity: Auto, 80 to 6400.
Interface: USB 2.0, Wi-Fi.
Power: Rechargeable lithium ion battery, DC input.
Dimensions: 79x60x29mm WHDmm.
Weight: 195 g (inc battery and card).
Prices: Get a price on the Canon PowerShot N at Amazon.

Post originally from: Digital Photography Tips.

Check out our more Photography Tips at Photography Tips for Beginners, Portrait Photography Tips and Wedding Photography Tips.

Canon Powershot N Review

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Canon PowerShot G16 First Impressions Review

26 Sep

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Canon’s PowerShot G16 might not be a massive upgrade compared to its predecessor, but it is a a solid camera that evolves the G-series in some interesting ways. In this article, we take a look at the G16’s real-world performance and dig into its new Wi-Fi feature as well as taking a critical look at its improved video mode. We’ve also added many more images to our previously-published gallery of real-world samples. Click through for a link to our first-impressions review. 

News: Digital Photography Review (dpreview.com)

 
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Canon PowerShot G16 Real-world Samples Gallery

26 Aug

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Canon’s latest flagship compact camera features a 12MP CMOS sensor, 28-140mm equivalent zoom lens and built-in WiFi. The PowerShot G16 was announced just a few days ago, but we’ve managed to get hold of one and we’ve spent the weekend shooting with it in a range of different environments. There’s more content on the way, but in the meantime, we hope you enjoy our quick 38-image gallery of JPEGs from the 12MP PowerShot G16. 

News: Digital Photography Review (dpreview.com)

 
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Win An Amazing “Canon PowerShot SX50 HS” & Other Photo Goodies

24 Aug

Take part in the rocking giveaway by our friends at MacPhun. You have a chance to win Canon PowerShot SX50 HS. There are also some sweet prizes for runner-ups, like Casetagrams and Bluelounge postal bags. The nicest thing about it is that there are no restrictions, except for the one – love Photography like we do. The Giveaway finishes in Continue Reading

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Canon announces PowerShot N Facebook ready edition

22 Aug

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Canon has created a ‘Facebook ready’ variant of its social-media-focused PowerShot N digital camera. The ‘Facebook ready’ version will only be available directly from Canon (in the US, at least) and has a dedicated Facebook connect button in the place of the connect-to-device one on the standard N. Once the camera has been taught your login details, you can upload images with a choice of who gets to see them, once posted. The 1/2.3″ 12MP sensor camera will cost $ 299.

News: Digital Photography Review (dpreview.com)

 
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Canon unveils PowerShot SX510 HS and SX170 IS 16MP superzooms

22 Aug

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Canon has announced its PowerShot SX510 and SX170 superzoom digital cameras. The PowerShot SX510 HS now uses a 12.1 megapixel CMOS sensor (versus a 16MP CCD on its predecessor), hence the new ‘HS’ designation. It offers Wi-Fi connectivity and what’s almost certainly the same 24-720mm equivalent optical zoom lens, a 3-inch LCD and Full HD video. The SX170 is essentially the same as its SX160 that came before it, with a 16x optical zoom and 16 megapixel CCD, though it’s no longer powered by AA-batteries.

News: Digital Photography Review (dpreview.com)

 
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Canon’s premium PowerShot G16 and S120 get minor updates

22 Aug

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Canon has announced its PowerShot G16 and S120 premium compact cameras – both of which get only minor updates compared to their predecessors. The G16 has the same lens, sensor, and design, but with Wi-Fi, a DIGIC 6 processor, a 12.2 fps burst mode, and a 1080/60p video mode. The Canon S120 has Wi-Fi like the S110 and gains a slightly faster lens (F1.8-5.7 vs F2.0-5.9), a 12.1 fps burst mode, and 60p video recording. Click through for more.

News: Digital Photography Review (dpreview.com)

 
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Just posted: Our Canon PowerShot D20 underwater camera review

19 Jun

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We’ve posted the first in a series of six reviews of rugged/waterproof compact cameras. First up is the Canon PowerShot D20, whose fish-inspired design can go for swim, get dropped on the floor, and shoot in freezing temperatures. Once we’ve completed our reviews of all six cameras, we’ll put together a comparison, so you can find out which is best-in-class. Follow the link to see how the PowerShot D20 performed in our tests.

News: Digital Photography Review (dpreview.com)

 
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