Friday, November 4, 2011

Canon PowerShot S95 with 3.0 Inch LCD




When Canon shipped its PowerShot S90 about a year ago, it made a big impression on advanced photographers. Tiny with a wide-aperture lens and all the essential manual shooting features, it was practically irresistible for dSLR luggers. It did have a few flaws, however, some of which Canon has attempted to address with the successor, the S95. These include a 720p video-capture upgrade, improved image stabilization, and some minor tweaks to the design and feature set. Performance, though, remains on the slow end of acceptable.
                                                                                                      
                                                                                                     
                                                                                                                         

Original Price - $399.00
                                                                                                                   Amazon Price - $334.95

Features:



  • Pros
    Beautiful image quality, even in low light. Large image sensor. Bright lens. Manual dials for a D-SLR-like shooting experience.
  • Cons
    Expensive for a pocket camera. Price puts it close to D-SLRs and compact interchangeable lens cameras, which offer far superior images.
  • Bottom Line
    If you must have a camera that fits in your pocket, the Canon PowerShot S95 is the best compact model you can buy.














The 3-inch LCD on the back of the camera is stellar. The average 3-inch camera display is made up of 230,000 dots; the S95 doubles that to 460,000, so images on the screen are incredibly crisp and sharp. The LCD shows virtually no motion blur, and offers great contrast with dark blacks. Using it as both a viewfinder and for image playback was a pleasure. There's a pop up flash up top.








The lens is the biggest draw here, with a focal range of 28-105mm (35mm equivalent), it offers just 3.75x optical zoom. But this lens isn't about zoom—it's about light. In its wide-angle position (28mm), the aperture can open all the way to f/2, so it lets in a lot of light, which is key for shooting in low light without a flash.








You can save more than $64 which is 16% of the original price rate. So why are you waiting for. You just simply click on the link to go to the Amazon.com buy this camera in cheaper rate. You can buy other products on that link no worries.


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