Thursday, February 4, 2010

Tripod Reviews No-blur Night Shots From A Compact Digital Camera (without A Tripod)?

No-blur night shots from a compact digital camera (without a tripod)? - tripod reviews

I want a compact digital camera that clear images at night (does mostly landscapes, horizons, etc.), without a tripod. It should not be too high tech, but have seen the pictures of blur and look good in a standard 4x6 print.

I heard the Fuji F30 good for low light conditions, but a comment I've seen on the inside. Can anyone comment on the quality of photos taken at night outdoors, not necessarily an issue before this vaccine?

Even if you can recommend other brands and models that end, please let me know! (I'm a big fan of Sony ...) Price range: $ 300-400 wide, more or less.

Thank you!

3 comments:

BL said...

and unfortunately it is almost impossible to take pictures at night, without a reason .... Stand is that the door remain open, to have enough light to take the picture, while virtually nothing can blur the picture by moving to shake as the shutter is open! That is, if you still try to find models with stabalizer you help a "picture" when you have a pretty steady hand may be able to even want! GOOD LUCK!

Petra_au said...

Yes, the F30 is a compact, low-light shooting BEST ... both inside and outside) in low light (handheld, no flash because it uses the ability, high ISO-(800-1600), where many other compact cameras will find it difficult to have production photos noise above ISO 200-400 . But even with a tripod, better in certain situations.

The only area where the F30 can sometimes struggle in outdoor lighting is very bright, with high contrast.

Thus, the F30 is the best compact for low light photography (not perfect), but ... Perfection is not enough.

See also the F31 fd, which is an update to face detection technology.

danman said...

I've heard, the Sony does not function well in low light. A friend of mine recently from Sony for a new Canon Powershot changed and is satisfied even in low light conditions pictures you took.

You are not yet a stand you in a disadvantageous position because requiring night shots with a slower speed. If you take too many pictures in the night, I think the use of a tripod. You can also use a digital SLR camera and a target fast (f2.8, etc.), (more than DSLR sensor area, is the creation of images in low light with less noise situation, given sufficiently "fast" lens ").

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