Hi,
What is the best point and shoot camera with the razor sharpest image. I have a Canon Elph 100 HS and the images are nice but not razor sharp.
Thanks.
SJK
Need a tripod for razor sharp.
SJK wrote:
Hi,
What is the best point and shoot camera with the razor sharpest image. I have a Canon Elph 100 HS and the images are nice but not razor sharp.
Thanks.
SJK
The Sony RX-100/RX-100M2 is probably near the top of point & shoot image quality, mainly because it has a larger sensor than most and a Zeiss lens.
I purchased a Sony RX-100 as a bridge camera to compliment my D-7100. It is an amazing little camera as far as IQ. I am working my way through the controls because it is so different from my Nikon. Regardless, I am very pleased.
amehta wrote:
The Sony RX-100/RX-100M2 is probably near the top of point & shoot image quality, mainly because it has a larger sensor than most and a Zeiss lens.
DavidPine wrote:
I purchased a Sony RX-100 as a bridge camera to compliment my D-7100. It is an amazing little camera as far as IQ. I am working my way through the controls because it is so different from my Nikon. Regardless, I am very pleased.
I agree, it is an amazing camera. I would not call it a "bridge camera", but a regular point & shoot.
amehta wrote:
I agree, it is an amazing camera. I would not call it a "bridge camera", but a regular point & shoot.
Come on now Amehta, "Regular Point & Shoot"??? You sound as tho only a DSLR is the way... as in religious Way! Perhaps fetish! OK, over stated, sorry, sensitive point.
A point and shoot is a $50 camera that grandma uses. She points, shoots, no consideration of lighting, composition, or color balance. The simpler the better, the cheaper the better. Quality? Good enough for a 4x6 at the drugstore.
Point and Shoot is a degrading name for these high end cameras. These hi-enders are better called 24/7 cameras. These 24/7s offer the advantage of being with us in a belt pack rather than having a DSLR and walking around with a back pack with containing multi lenses, tripod, extra flash and such. These 24/7 offer quality and versatility.
dpullum wrote:
Come on now Amehta, "Regular Point & Shoot"??? You sound as tho only a DSLR is the way... as in religious Way! Perhaps fetish! OK, over stated, sorry, sensitive point.
A point and shoot is a $50 camera that grandma uses. She points, shoots, no consideration of lighting, composition, or color balance. The simpler the better, the cheaper the better. Quality? Good enough for a 4x6 at the drugstore.
Point and Shoot is a degrading name for these high end cameras. These hi-enders are better called 24/7 cameras. These 24/7s offer the advantage of being with us in a belt pack rather than having a DSLR and walking around with a back pack with containing multi lenses, tripod, extra flash and such. These 24/7 offer quality and versatility.
Come on now Amehta, "Regular Point & Shoo... (
show quote)
Sorry, I'm with Amehta on this one, even though I detect a little sarcastic tongue-in-cheek cajoling in your response. Even a $50 "grandma" point and shoot needs consideration for lighting, exposure, and composition. Except for the inherent quality of the different component parts, there's no difference between it and the RX100/II. :D
amehta wrote:
I agree, it is an amazing camera. I would not call it a "bridge camera", but a regular point & shoot.
Curious, the camera offers full manual control as well as shutter priority, aperture control and adjustable ISO. Why do you state it is not a bridge camera???
JCam
Loc: MD Eastern Shore
lukan wrote:
Sorry, I'm with Amehta on this one, even though I detect a little sarcastic tongue-in-cheek cajoling in your response. Even a $50 "grandma" point and shoot needs consideration for lighting, exposure, and composition. Except for the inherent quality of the different component parts, there's no difference between it and the RX100/II. :D
"...inherent quality of the component parts..." is one hell of a big difference!
So long as grandma gets an acceptable to her picture of the grand-kid(s) that's all she probably cares about just like the simple box cameras of years ago.
Panasonic Lx7 and Olympus xz2. You can get a refurb xz2 for around 225. Normally a 600 camera. The lx7 is300 new.
Cdouthitt wrote:
Panasonic Lx7 and Olympus xz2. You can get a refurb xz2 for around 225. Normally a 600 camera. The lx7 is300 new.
I forgot about those 2. The LX7 is small and thin and makes very sharp pictures. The Oly is just plain awesome all around, but a little larger. The Oly SOoC prints (colors, especially) are beautiful.
It doesn't matter what you call them it's the fact you have a camera with you.
Sony RX100
deej wrote:
Curious, the camera offers full manual control as well as shutter priority, aperture control and adjustable ISO. Why do you state it is not a bridge camera???
From the
wikipedia page for "Bridge camera" (link):
Bridge cameras are cameras which fill the niche between the single-lens reflex cameras (SLRs) and the point-and-shoot camera. They are often comparable in size and weight to the smallest digital SLRs (DSLR) and there are also superzoom DSLR-shape bridge camera with retractable lens to make it more compact, but almost all digital bridge cameras lack an optical viewfinder system (film bridges generally had a lighter version of a reflex finder).
I visualize a very distinct size and shape, and a super-zoom lens, and it is not "pocket size".
In contrast to this, the RX-100 has the form factor of a compact point and shoot camera, and "only" a 3x zoom. It probably best fits the "luxury P&S" category which has been around for decades, most notably with some Leica offerings.
dpullum wrote:
Come on now Amehta, "Regular Point & Shoot"??? You sound as tho only a DSLR is the way... as in religious Way! Perhaps fetish! OK, over stated, sorry, sensitive point.
I should have said "regular sized", not regular. :-)
I don't mean to dismiss it, I have one myself.
deepdiverv wrote:
It doesn't matter what you call them it's the fact you have a camera with you.
After you crop away the branches in the very front, print that glossy on some fine cardboard stock, flip it over, write a short message on one side and address it to your friend on the other. Stick a stamp in the corner and you've got a perfect picture postcard.
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