What's a point-and-shoot camera that's good in low light? - best low light point & shoot cameras for december 19th 2009
My friend has recently damaged my Kodak EasyShare M853, which was quite good in low light. He had previously before with Fujifilm FinePix, I was happy. Was, however, when I try to replace me with another Fuji Kodak, Fuji seems too bright and the camera is good even in bad lighting conditions (Z220fd), not even commercially available.
I looked at the Sony Cyber-(I have a shot if you are using SD cards) Nikon Coolpix, Olympus FE5010, among many others. Apparently, the Coolpix sucks. I do not know what they are buying.
I am looking for around $ 100 - $ 200 What is a good camera to get to, even in low light conditions to shoot (what) I often do?
Friday, January 22, 2010
Best Low Light Point & Shoot Cameras For December 19th 2009 What's A Point-and-shoot Camera That's Good In Low Light?
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3 comments:
I hope they realize that the camera from a company of GE Appliances, is produced not a camera company. I saw many complaints about the GE cameras here.
What's so bad about AA batteries? All batteries have decent contributions. I'm using Sanyo eneloop AA batteries for my little Canon, and they work very well. They come charged and stay charged outside the camera. They seem more into the camera recently too.
I recommend Panasonic Lumix DMC-FS15 12 megapixel digital camera with 5x optical zoom and MEGA 2.7-inch LCD
http://www.amazon.com/gp/product/B001QFZ ...
Well, my point and shoot camera is a Sony DSC-W300, and I was fairly difficult, of light on the low capacity. Once part of a weekend a few weeks, a replacement for this reason I came to the conclusion say that it is even worse than any other point and shoot there (in fact, the mirror has some good low light pictures, so I 'm through high-quality pictures of both my DSLR and a camcorder in low light conditions are violated).
I am not suggesting a particular brand / model, but are looking at things:
One of the major brands: Nikon, Canon, Sony, Olympus, Pana-Lumix, Samsung.
A physically larger lens
A high ISO setting: a grainy picture is often better than no picture at all.
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