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Review: Fujifilm FinePix F11 digital camera

A six megapixel point-and-shoot that can ‘see’ in the dark

Price: £299
Manufacturer: FujiFilm



Ratings
Overall rating: Overall rating
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Verdict

Good Points
• Low light shooting up to ISO1600 equivalent
• Great image quality, with or without flash
• Simple to operate and fast in operation

Bad Points
• Not a huge improvement on the F10
• xD-Picture Card format used by Fuji and Olympus cameras only

Verdict
The Fujifilm F11 is a very easy to use digital compact camera that is best suited to photographers taking images under a wide variety of lighting conditions


Gavin Stoker, Computeract!ve 19 Apr 2006

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Now that most digital compact cameras boast a high enough megapixel resolution and lens quality to deliver pin sharp images 99 per cent of the time, manufacturers’ can start to focus thier attention on ‘extras’.

Last year it was larger screens, this year it’s the turn of low-light photography, meaning the ability to shoot without flash for more natural looking images.

FujiFilm's F10 – the F11’s predecessor – was arguably the first compact to convincingly do this, and this new version keeps the same ISO1600 equivalent light sensitivity needed plus ISO800 for video clips, adding some minor tweaks. Fujifilm also recently announced cameras with an ISO3200 option.

Chief among these tweaks are a high 6.3 megapixel resolution, 2.5in screen with adjustable brightness, plus creative shooting options like aperture or shutter priority.

There’s also a 3x optical zoom and the ability to take close ups in 'macro mode' 5cm from your subject. Useful for the holidays, the F11 can deliver 500 shots from its rechargeable battery. Images are stored on an xD-Picture Card, however only a 16Mb card is supplied.

Not the slimmest ‘compact’, the boxy metal-build F11 feels substantial yet sits comfortably in a pocket. It also powers up rapidly, with a two-second delay between taking maximum resolution shots.

In the absence of an optical viewfinder, the screen dominates the camera back next to which are a zoom control, buttons for playback and one marked F (for Photo).

This time-saving mode allows the adjustment of image resolution, light sensitivity and colour effects – including a contemporary ‘chrome’ that provides extra punch - without having to delve into more involved menus.

The F11 has won acclaim for its ability to handle low light, and lives up to the hype by delivering natural looking colourful images, a discreet handling of image noise (tiny, film grain-like speckles that creep into shots at higher ISO settings) and sharp detail.

We could moan about the F11’s lack of manual features or optical image stabilisation – which would compensate for camera shake and image blur - but its surprisingly versatile automatic performance is chief among what people will want from a point-and-shoot camera.

However its lack of definitive improvements over the existing F10 make the F11 something of a stop gap; albeit a very good one.

Canon Powershot A620
Verdict: Hard to fault 7-megapixel digital camera, that packs in a lot of features for its price.
Rating: 4
Price: £320

See also:

Image: Kodak EasyShare v570 reviewIntroducing the first digital compact camera with two lenses  13 Apr 2006
Image: Review: Olympus Mju 700A sleek and sexy digital camera and a good 7.1 megapixel snapper to match  10 Apr 2006
Konica Minolta Dimage X1A small and compact 8-megapixel camera  22 Feb 2006
Ricoh Caplio R3Eight Ricoh Caplio R3 cameras worth £250 each to be won  12 Jan 2006
Pentax Optio S5zPoint-and-click photographers form an orderly queue; action-shot junkies best look elsewhere  21 Dec 2005
Sony Cybershot DSC-T7A digital camera so thin it could almost fit in a wallet  13 Dec 2005
Canon EOS 350DTake digital pictures in style with this high-end SLR camera  04 Nov 2005

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