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Panasonic Lumix DMC-ZS100 / TZ100 real-world sample gallery

01 Mar

The Panasonic Lumix ZS100 made its debut in early January, offering a sizable 25-250mm equivalent zoom range to complement its 1″-type sensor. With a built-in viewfinder it certainly looks to be travel-ready, so we’ve taken it across land and sea to gather some initial sample images. While Adobe Camera Raw support isn’t available yet, we’ve made a few in-camera Raw conversions and will update this gallery when support arrives. 

Articles: Digital Photography Review (dpreview.com)

 
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Panasonic Lumix DMC-ZS100 / TZ100 puts 1″ sensor and 10x zoom in your pocket

08 Jan

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Panasonic has announced the Lumix DMC TZ100 / ZS100, the first compact superzoom camera to include a 1″-type sensor. Despite having a sensor four times larger than most travel zoom cameras, the ZS100 manages to incorporate a 25-250mm equivalent zoom into a very small body. It also finds room for a built-in viewfinder and two full control dials. It shoots 4K video and incorporates a host of features based on that capability, many of which utilize its touchscreen rear LCD. The camera will be available from March 2016 at a cost of around $ 699.


Press Release:

The new LUMIX DMC-ZS100 – Raising the bar for compact travel cameras

Panasonic’s latest compact camera includes a 1-inch sensor and 4K functions for outstanding performance and usability on the go

Las Vegas, NV (January 5, 2016) – Panasonic has today launched the new LUMIX DMC-ZS100, a premium  compact travel camera that boasts performance typically associated with expensive interchangeable lens models. Despite the camera’s small size, the latest addition to the LUMIX ZS range combines a host of features and a powerful 10x zoom to make it the perfect travel companion for even the most demanding photographers and videographers.

A large 1-inch MOS sensor, one of the biggest of any camera in its class, combines with Panasonic’s Venus engine to capture consistently bright and beautiful images wherever your travels take you. And with innovative features such as 4K Photo and Post-Focus, it’s never been easier to capture the exact frame that you visualized when looking through the lens. What’s more, with simple control and connectivity, you can share your adventure with friends and family at the press of a button.

Capture you travels in outstanding quality
The 1-inch sensor’s large pixels are capable of capturing more light, resulting in shots that look crisp, clear and natural, even when photographing at high ISO, such as at dusk and dawn. The Venus engine also provides unrivalled color accuracy for a travel camera – the unique hues, saturation and luminosity of a multi-colored sunset, for example, are individually processed and carefully adjusted to reproduce breathtakingly authentic results.

The LUMIX DMC-ZS100 is the first in its series to incorporate a F2.8-5.9 LEICA DC lens, which allows you to achieve true-to-life images with stunning depth of field. The lens also features a versatile 10x zoom range of 25mm-250mm (35mm camera equivalent), making it ideal for photographing birds and other elusive wildlife.

In addition to stunning photo quality, the camera also provides 4K video recording capability that fits easily into your pocket. The LUMIX DMC-ZS100 offers smooth, high quality video recording in 4K 3840×2160 at 24 and 30 fps in MP4; as well as high-resolution Full HD 1920×1080 60p videos in MP4. With four times the resolution of Full HD, the resulting 4K video brings the sights and sounds of your travels to life, just as you remember capturing it.

Achieve professional quality results, every time
As well as recording high resolution videos, the camera’s 4K capability also enables you to capture accurate photos like never before. For the first time in a travel camera, Panasonic’s 4K Photo function allows you to extract an 8-megapixel still from 4K video (30fps) with total control and precision, so even fleeting moments of action, such as the exact moment you hit the water diving into the sea, can be captured and enjoyed for a lifetime.  

Another new addition to the LUMIX ZS range is the Post-Focus feature, which allows you to choose the focal point of any picture, even after it’s taken. The LUMIX DMC-ZS100’s 0.1s Light Speed Auto Focus and Depth from Defocus (DFD) capability combine to calculate the distance between the camera and the subject, capturing optimal focus for 49 individual areas within each frame. Once the photo is taken, you can then manually select the exact area you want to focus on – from the minutiae of your subject’s eye, to an individual bird as a flock takes flight. What’s more, from a single photo you can export multiple shots with different focal points.

In complete control of your creativity
With such a wide array of advanced functions and controls, the LUMIX DMC-ZS100 has been designed for fast and practical usability. The Live View Finder (LVF) features 1,166K-dot resolution, as well as LVF AF that detects when you’re about to take a shot. The camera also provides extensive manual controls so you can put your photography skills to the test, including dedicated physical rings and dials for settings such as zoom, aperture, shutter speed, manual focus and ISO level.

Share your memories
Once you’ve captured an array of beautiful photos and video, the LUMIX DMC-ZS100 makes it fast and simple to share them with friends and family. Combining Wi-Fi and QR code connectivity, it is easy to connect the camera to a smartphone or tablet, allowing you to post to social media almost as soon as they’ve been recorded.

Additional features

 • 3.0inch 1,040k dot touch screen
 • 5 AXIS HYBRID O.I.S and Level Shot functions
 • 10fps burst photo mode (full resolution – 5fps with AF)
 • Face / eye tracking AF
 • In-camera RAW data development
 • Wide Panorama function
 • Full wireless control and photography via the Panasonic Image App

The DMC-ZS100 will be available at www.shop.panasonic.com  and valued channel partners at the end of March in both silver and black for $ 699.99.

Panasonic Lumix ZS100 specifications

Price
MSRP $ 699 / £549
Body type
Body type Compact
Body material Metal, composite
Sensor
Max resolution 5472 x 3648
Image ratio w:h 1:1, 4:3, 3:2, 16:9
Effective pixels 20 megapixels
Sensor photo detectors 21 megapixels
Sensor size 1″ (13.2 x 8.8 mm)
Sensor type CMOS
Processor Venus Engine
Color space sRGB
Color filter array Primary color filter
Image
ISO Auto, 125-12800 (expands to 80-25600)
White balance presets 5
Custom white balance Yes (4 slots)
Image stabilization Optical
Image stabilization notes Hybrid 5-axis available in movie mode
Uncompressed format RAW
JPEG quality levels Fine, standard
File format
  • JPEG (Exif v2.3)
  • Raw (Panasonic RW2 format)
Optics & Focus
Focal length (equiv.) 25–250 mm
Optical zoom 10×
Maximum aperture F2.8 – F5.9
Autofocus
  • Contrast Detect (sensor)
  • Multi-area
  • Center
  • Selective single-point
  • Tracking
  • Single
  • Continuous
  • Touch
  • Face Detection
  • Live View
Autofocus assist lamp Yes
Digital zoom Yes (4X)
Manual focus Yes
Normal focus range 50 cm (19.69)
Macro focus range 5 cm (1.97)
Number of focus points 49
Screen / viewfinder
Articulated LCD Fixed
Screen size 3
Screen dots 1,040,000
Touch screen Yes
Screen type TFT LCD
Live view Yes
Viewfinder type Electronic
Viewfinder coverage 100%
Viewfinder magnification 0.46×
Viewfinder resolution 1,166,000
Photography features
Minimum shutter speed 60 sec
Maximum shutter speed 1/16000 sec
Exposure modes
  • Program
  • Aperture Priority
  • Shutter Priority
  • Manual
Scene modes
  • Clear Portrait
  • Silky Skin
  • Backlit Softness
  • Clear in Backlight
  • Relaxing Tone
  • Sweet Child's Face
  • Distinct Scenery
  • Bright Blue Sky
  • Romantic Sunset Glow
  • Vivid Sunset Glow
  • Glistening Water
  • Clear Nightscape
  • Cool Night Sky
  • Warm Glowing Nightscape
  • Artistic Nightscape
  • Glittering Illuminations
  • Handheld Night Shot
  • Clear Night Portrait
  • Soft Image of a Flower
  • Appetizing Food
  • Cute Dessert
  • Freeze Animal Motion
  • Clear Sports Shot
  • Monochrome
Built-in flash Yes
Flash range 8.00 m (at Auto ISO)
Flash modes Auto, Auto/Red-eye Reduction, Forced On, Forced On/Red-eye Reduction, Slow Sync., Slow Sync./Red-eye Reduction, Forced Off
Continuous drive 50.0 fps
Self-timer Yes (2 or 10 secs, 3 shots @ 10 sec)
Metering modes
  • Multi
  • Center-weighted
  • Spot
Exposure compensation ±5 (at 1/3 EV steps)
AE Bracketing ±3 (3, 5, 7 frames at 1/3 EV, 1/2 EV, 1 EV steps)
Videography features
Resolutions 4K/UHD (3840 x 2160 @ 30p/24p), 1920 x 1080 @ 60p/60i/30p/24p, 640 x 480 (30p)
Format MPEG-4, AVCHD
Microphone Stereo
Speaker Mono
Storage
Storage types SD/SDHC/SDXC card
Connectivity
USB USB 2.0 (480 Mbit/sec)
HDMI Yes (microHDMI)
Microphone port No
Headphone port No
Wireless Built-In
Wireless notes 802.11b/g/n
Remote control Yes (via smartphone)
Physical
Environmentally sealed No
Battery Battery Pack
Battery description Lithium-ion battery & charger
Battery Life (CIPA) 300
Weight (inc. batteries) 312 g (0.69 lb / 11.01 oz)
Dimensions 111 x 65 x 44 mm (4.37 x 2.56 x 1.73)
Other features
Orientation sensor Yes
GPS None

Articles: Digital Photography Review (dpreview.com)

 
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Far-reaching: Panasonic Lumix DMC-ZS100 / TZ100 hands-on preview

07 Jan

Panasonic Lumix DSC-ZS100 / TZ100 basic specs

Panasonic is using CES 2016 to announce the latest two models in its series of travel zoom cameras (known as the TZ series in most of the world or ZS in North America). While one of them is a logical replacement for the existing models, the TZ100/ZS100 is a genuinely more advanced thing altogether, squeezing a 1″-type sensor into a body only slightly larger than we’ve become used to from cameras in this category.

Traditionally travel zooms have used small sensors (~29mm2) to allow the inclusion of long lenses in a small overall package. Impressively, the ZS100 fits a much larger sensor (~116mm2) while still offering a useful zoom range and sensibly-sized form factor. The larger sensor offers better image quality, which has prompted Panasonic to offer a maximum ISO of 12800 on the ZS100, with an extended setting of 25600.

ZS100 / TZ100 Lens

The ZS100 has a 10X zoom, offering a 25-250mm equivalent reach – just enough range to classify it as a proper superzoom. And, in all honesty, probably enough for most applications for many people: we suspect the push beyond 80x zooms has as much to do with being able to boast a bigger number on the store shelves than because contemporary consumers find themselves needing so much more zoom than they used to.

The ZS100’s lens starts out as a very respectable F2.8 maximum aperture but very quickly slides towards the F5.9 that you’re limited to at full zoom. By 50mm equivalent it’s already dropped to F4 (F11 equiv., given the crop factor), and it’s at F5.1 (F13.9 equiv.) by the time you get to 100mm equivalent – this isn’t about to offer you shallow depth-of-field portraits. The camera does use Panasonic’s Depth-from-Defocus system that interprets subject distances based on an understanding of its lens characteristics – we’ve found this system to support surprisingly effective at subject tracking on previous cameras.

Viewfinder specs

The ZS100 has a 1.166M-dot equivalent viewfinder. That word ‘equivalent’ makes clear that the finder features a field-sequential design, updating red, green and blue information one after the other, rather than including separate color elements at each ‘pixel’ position. The 0.2″ finder is pretty small which the optics don’t do much to rescue. On the plus side it does include an eye sensor to allow automatic switching when you come to use it.

Using the viewfinder pulls the battery life down to 240 shots per charge from the otherwise pretty typical 300 shots per charge.

Higher-end ambitions

It’s not just the sensor that suggests the ZS100 is the most serious travel zoom in the series so far. It features two full control dials, a full-sized dial on the top plate of the camera as well as a ring around the outside of the lens. It also gets a touchscreen (something even the flagship LX100 doesn’t have) that can be used either just to point-and-shoot or to reposition the the AF point while shooting through the viewfinder.

In addition, the ZS100 has four customizable buttons, along with five touchscreen slots that can be customized for more fast access.

One thing that detracts from its higher-end ambitions is the camera’s construction: the camera feels rather lightweight an insubstantial. This is only an impression, of course: we have no way of knowing how durable the build quality is at this point. What’s certain, though, is that it doesn’t have the reassuring heft that we usually encounter in cameras costing this much.

4K capabilities for both movies and stills

As you’d expect from Panasonic, the ZS100 offers 4K video recording and a host of features based around it. As well as the video recording itself: UHD capture at up to 30p (25p for the TZ version), the camera offers a range of photo features derived from the video feed. 

There’s the now-familiar 4K Photo mode of course, which records short clips of video so that you can grab individual frames from it, including an option that captures the 30 frames before and after you hit the shutter. Then there’s post-shot focus, which shoots video while racking focus from the nearest to the further object it can find in the scene, so that you can choose the perfectly focused shot. The ZS100 is the first Panasonic camera to have a dedicated button for the mode.

4K Live Cropping

New to the ZS100 are two as-you-shoot video options that benefit from the camera’s 4K capabilities. The first is the option to crop a 1920 x 1080 region from 4K video then produce a stabilized pan across the rest of the 4K frame. The other gets the camera to zoom in on a 1920 x 1080 region of the frame, as the video runs (akin to the ‘Ken Burns effect’). These effects are easily achieved in most high-end editing software but their inclusion in the ZS100 means they can be generated in-camera and incorporated into video clips cut together using less expensive or free software.

Wi-Fi

Just to top it all off, the the ZS100 includes Wi-Fi and in-camera Raw conversion, allowing images to be fine-tuned before passing them off to your smart device. Panasonic’s ‘Image App’ allows remote control of the device and all the other things you’d expect of a contemporary connected camera.

The only thing that’s missing is an NFC antenna – between the cost of the hardware and the fact that Apple won’t let iOS owners utilize NFC for anything so frivolous as camera connection, Panasonic chose to use on-screen QR codes to communicate the necessary connection credentials to other devices.

A more conventional offering

Alongside the ZS100/TZ100, Panasonic has also announced the ZS60, which will be known as the TZ80 outside North America. This model is much more in keeping with the travel zoom models Panasonic has built before (a subset of the market it pioneered).

The ZS60 uses a small 18MP CMOS sensor, allowing it to pack a 24-720mm equivalent zoom into a small package. The downsides are that it’s never a terribly fast lens (F3.3-6.4, or F18-35 in equivalent terms) and it loses the ZS100’s large thumb dial on the top plate, making do with a smaller combined dial/four-way controller. Beyond this, the features it offers are broadly similar to the ZS100 (including 4K video capture), just with a lower maximum ISO setting and no electronic shutter mode. It will sell for around $ 450.

Panasonic ZS100 / TZ100 in context

It’s been two-and-a-half years since Sony introduced the first compact with a 1″-type sensor and redefined what is possible from a compact camera. Since then, as you might expect, the number of 1″-type compacts have continued to expand. Up until now it’s been possible to choose from pocketable cameras with short zooms or much larger cameras with more reach, what there hasn’t been is something offering a little of both. The ZS100 finally fills this gap: a small camera with a big sensor and a long zoom. The cost is that rapidly dropping aperture as you zoom, of course.

The small, field sequential viewfinder is the other other compromise that stands out on the ZS100 but that seems more likely to hit the $ 699 price point, rather than just a size concern. To put this price in perspective, it’s the same as the launch price of Canon’s G7 X, $ 100 less than the viewfinder-touting Canon PowerShot G5 X and Sony Cyber-shot DSC-RX100 Mark III, all of which have considerably shorter (but brighter) lenses.

Articles: Digital Photography Review (dpreview.com)

 
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