Posts Tagged cameras

Nikon L120 Super-zoom Camera not so Super

The popular Nikon L120 comes with some nice features and a great 21X zoom in a reasonably small package, but the lack of manual controls, no viewfinder, AAA batteries, and lackluster picture quality combine for underwhelming results overall.

I’m a big fan of super-zoom digital cameras and recommended this category in my travel writing book for writers and bloggers who want to publish good photos consistently, but don’t want to lug around a big DSLR and various lenses. These cameras let you zoom in far closer than you can with a basic point-and-shoot, they have a better lens, and usually have a faster shutter release time. They offer a good trade-off between convenience and quality.

Usually.

I must say it’s mixed bag with this Nikon Coolpix L120 one I picked up recently, on sale at Best Buy for $238 plus tax. I was under pressure to buy something in a hurry after my beloved Kodak Z1012 wigged out on me recently and started putting itself into Sport mode at random moments and getting finicky about when it was ready to shoot or not. I had very few beefs before with that camera besides so-so resolution in low light on auto mode (much better with manual tweaks) and a battery that required lugging around a too-big separate charger. It took photos great enough for print magazine spreads and I published hundreds of shots on the web I took with it, some in award-winning articles.

A shot too tough for Nikon's auto-focus

I’m ready to ditch this Nikon after two weeks, however. I’m still fiddling with the few manual controls there are to improve image quality, but I’m not optimistic this will meet my needs. I need to go back to the drawing board and do more research this time before buying a better camera. This one seemed the best of what was on offer when my wife called on the phone saying she needed to buy a new camera in an hour to have at the wedding she was attending. “Get the Nikon one,” I said. “The price is right and it should be reliable.”

Wrong. I’ll get to the quirks in a moment, but the main problem is, this camera just plain doesn’t take great photos half the time. If the light is not perfect, the photos comes up short. If you’re in low light conditions and trying to get a shot that’s not full of noise/distortion, you may as well be using an iPhone: forget the 14 megapixels and the high-ISO settings touted in the specs as they won’t do anything except give you big file sizes to store. It’s like this camera’s sensor just throws up its hands and says, “Sorry!” Since there are very few manual overrides (I had plenty on my Kodak), you’re mostly stuck with what the camera gives you automatically unless you drill down to the right situation mode, these mostly being for cases where you’ll use a flash.

Typical results in low light without a flash

It also dials back the shutter speed quite a bit if the light isn’t bright (again, you can’t adjust this), so I’ve been ending up with blurry photos in conditions where I’ve never encountered them with far cheaper cameras. There’s anti-shake technology supposedly, but I now don’t trust it unless it’s sunny where I’m shooting. I feel like I have to hold this camera like it’s a sleeping newborn. Video quality is just okay. It’s higher resolution than my Flip camera and records in stereo—plus there’s a handy wind noise reduction feature—but you have to pan more slowly with this one to keep it from being blurry, especially indoors. It’s better suited for outdoor pursuits.

This Nikon also uses 4 AA batteries instead of a rechargeable lithium ion battery, which makes it heavier than it should be considering all the plastic parts, and requires lugging around a charger that holds 4 AA batteries, plus an adapter if you’ll be in a country with different voltage. The memory card is under the same flap as the batteries, which means all 4 can spill out when you’re just trying to switch out a card. Dumb design.

There’s also no optical viewfinder, which drives me batty. Looking at a screen while trying to shoot in bright sunlight, all while holding the camera steady away from your body, is asking for trouble. It’s like shooting blind sometimes. I know this is a common problem with compact point-and-shoots, but it shouldn’t be with a camera this size.

The Plus Sides of the Nikon L120

We’ll keep this camera for family snapshots and day trips though because it does do some things very well. The 921,000 dpi 3-inch screen on the back is beautiful and it’s easy to tell if you got a keeper shot or not. The buttons are few and the menus are fairly intuitive, though all the non-automatic options are groups under “night landscape” except for “smart portrait” (detects eyes for focusing) and “sport continuous.” The latter function works quite well, at up to 20 frames at 15fps, but the resolution goes down.

In good light, good results

The main reason to get this kind of camera—the 21X optical zoom—is smooth and impressive, allowing you to get up close and personal without getting in anyone’s face. It’s fast too. One nice feature with this Nikon is that you can control that zoom from two places: the usual spot by the shutter release, plus an extra button on the left side of the lens. Keep in mind though that 21X is a pretty shaky shot to hold, especially with no viewfinder besides the screen on the back. It’s hard to get a shot in focus when extended full length without a tripod.

This camera performs better than any other I’ve used when the flash is on, even without the situational overrides. It illuminates without washing out, red-eye reduction works well automatically, and the colors don’t get too distorted. If you take a lot of photos of your friends partying, this will do the job well.

Overall though, since I so seldom use a flash, I’d give this Nikon L120 a C- because to me it feels less than average. Looking at the Amazon reviews I’m in the minority, so maybe if I weren’t comparing it to my past Kodak and Casio cameras it would rate higher, but I guess I’ve been spoiled.

This camera is gifted in some areas, plus it’s hard to complain too loudly when the price is this good (under $250 at some merchants). There’s a lot crammed into that price, which is probably why it is selling so well. But the main reason you buy a camera—especially one you take traveling—is to end up with better than average photos. With the definition of “average” rising higher each year, Nikon fell behind on this model. It’s a good value if your budget is tight and you want a serious zoom. But spend a bit more for something better if you need high-quality results you will publish or frame on a wall.

Get the Nikon L120 at Amazon or search prices online.

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LowePro CompuDayPack for Carry-on Luggage

Since entering the wonderful world of DSLR camera ownership, I’ve struggled with how to safely carry my precious camera on a plane, while having enough room in one bag to also carry my laptop, phone, chargers, reading material, sunglasses, water bottle, toiletries and paperwork. I’ve put a small padded camera bag in a favorite large tote, which has worked out okay (but resulted in a huge bag to carry on one shoulder), and sampled the Crumpler Sinking Barge, which was just too much bag for this amateur photographer.

The LowePro CompuDaypack comes thisclose to being my ideal go-to bag for camera/laptop combo carry-on purposes, but does fall just a little short in a couple of instances. And that’s okay: this bag isn’t marketed as a carry-on bag, but rather a student backpack or for use around town.

First, the highlights:

  • The exterior material is hearty ripstop nylon; the accent color comes in green (my fave!), though shown here in orange. The colored material has a subtle dotted texture that just gives the bag some added pizazz.
  • The camera compartment is in a hinge-like, zippered compartment at the bottom of the bag. You use removable, padded, Velcro inserts to customize the protection for your particular camera and lens(es).
  • I fit my DSLR, a long lens, my point-and-shoot camera, a Flip video camera, and assorted chargers and batteries in the camera section with no problem.
  • A small exterior pocket with headphones port allows you to listen to music easily on the go.
  • The large inner storage area above the camera is nice and wide, and includes many small organizational pockets for pens and such.
  • The big, padded zippered area for laptops should fit most 17-inch netbooks. (It fits my big ol’ Dell laptop with extra bulky battery, with room to spare.)
  • A thin sleeve pocket near the laptop space can house file folders.
  • Shoulder straps are nicely padded for comfort, and I particularly like the “grab handle” at the top of the backpack.

Indeed, this bag holds a lot of stuff, but the main storage area above the camera (pictured below, at left), just isn’t quite big enough for all of my particular junk. On my family’s recent flights to the West Coast, I had my husband store my laptop charger in his bag, because I simply could not fit everything I wanted to have close to me in this Lowepro CompuDaypack.

Plus, even after taking out the charger, I had a hard time closing the backpack with my water bottle (and see-through bag of toiletries, and a snack and a book, etc.) in there. In fact, because the main storage space has only one zipper (not two zippers like the camera compartment and the laptop compartment) I found myself really struggling to close it and the zipper seam (where my water bottle bulged out on the side) started to stretch and pull apart.

I suppose the solution is to carry a bona fide purse for toiletries (and water bottle and charger) as my second carry-on bag. Or stick these additional items in my rollerboard that I store in an overhead bin the next time I travel alone, if I don’t need them right at my feet during a flight.

I think this bag would be close to perfect if a) the main storage compartment had two zippers to meet at the top instead of just one that zips all the way across to one side and b) there was a water bottle holder on the exterior.

With those caveats, I really, really like the Lowepro CompuDaypack, and I look forward to using it on future travels.

Purchase the CompuDaypack on the LowePro website for $99.99. I have also found it discounted on Amazon.com.

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5 Things I Always Pack – Janna Graber

This month’s guest post of “5 things I always pack” is from Janna Graber, editor of international travel site www.goworldtravel.com and the Colorado uber-site, www.goColorado.com. A travel journalist and video producer, Janna has worked in some 38 countries. She feels completely at home on the road.

1. My “airplane sleeping gear”

Over the years, I’ve developed a routine for sleeping on airplanes, and I always bring the same items with me. First, I travel in comfy clothes (my friends call them my “travel pants,” but they are really just nice looking sweatpants). Then I have a stuffed neck pillow (leopard print, it was all they had on sale at the time), and two inflatable neck pillows. I put one half-inflated pillow behind the small of my back (no back ache then!), and use the two other pillows to keep my head in place while I sleep. Then I have my usual ear plugs, eye mask and lightweight blanket. Sure, I may look ridiculous, but at least I’m fast asleep.

2. My book.

Reading is one of my favorite pastimes, and traveling gives me the opportunity to catch up on my favorite authors. I always have a good paperback with me. They’re easy to stick in my backpack, and I can get some good reading in whenever I have to sit and wait.

3. My Rhonda Allison sunscreen

Since it comes in 1 oz bottles, this Rhonda Allison sunscreen is perfect for my carry-on. It’s not greasy and is formulated specifically for faces, which means I actually wear it every day. This sunscreen is usually only sold in high-end salons or dermatologists’ offices, but you can find it online for a good price.

4. My cameras

Photographs are the best souvenirs, and they’re also a huge part of our reader experience at Go World Travel and Go Colorado. I always have a good digital camera with me. Right now, I use the Nikon Coolpix S630. I like the 7x zoom it has, as well as its light weight.

If I have the space, I also have my Canon HV20 3MP High Definition MiniDV Camcorder and tripod. (The newer version of this is the Canon VIXIA HV40.) These days, we produce video stories whenever we can.

5. My Samsonite carry-on suitcase

The zipper is on its last legs and one of the wheels is starting to wobble, but I still cling to my favorite Samsonite carry-on suitcase. It has my faded “I love Canada” handle protector, so I can easily locate the suitcase on the luggage belt, and has traveled with me across the world. Someday, I’ll have to break down and buy a new suitcase, but I’m keeping this one as long as I can.

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Kodak Z1012 for a Step Up in Your Photos

kodak z1012 isWhen I was backpacking around the world in the pre-digital age, I was traveling through Vietnam with a 20X zoom Pentax point-and-shoot. Another guy in our group touring the Mekong Delta was traveling with a heavy Nikon SLR and a big camera bag full of lenses. Time after time, a great shot would present itself, I would capture a cool photo, and the SLR guy would fumble with his lenses. By the time he got the right one on and focused the camera, the opportunity was gone.

Which brings me to the $250 list price super-zoom camera that does it all simply and in a hurry: the Kodak Z1012 IS. Kodak digital cameras are rarely reviewed as the best of the best in any category, but the brand stands out as being the most user-friendly and the simplest to figure out. Each model is also usually a really good value.

The controls are intuitive, the manual is thin by design, and the buttons are right where they feel like they should be. I’ve used cameras where one wrong move could unleash a series of commands that took five minutes to figure out how to undo. No fear of that here. Despite a long list of cool features and effects, you can easily use everything offered on the Z1012 without an engineering degree or a day with your instruction book. The sole function I had to look up in the manual was how to change the shutter speed manually. (It involved a little jog dial at the top I hadn’t noticed.)

This is no toy, however. I shot a few magazine spreads and hundreds of web article photos with its predecessor model before I dropped it on a cobbled Czech street and lost the use of all options besides “automatic.” Despite its small package, this one has an even better Schneider-Kreuznach lens with an optical 12X zoom—a 33-396mm equivalent. It has a whole array of manual modes for shooting action, night scenes, or whatever, plus a video mode that can shoot in hi-def with stereo sound. It has face detection, a self-timer, image stabilization, panorama stitching, and a cool burst mode that captures either the first five or last five shots in a row. That last one is really handy when trying to catch a sports scene, ziplining, or a bird/animal in action.

One area where this camera really excels is the click-to-capture speed: 0.23 seconds. Not as great as a big SLR, but better than most point-and-shoots. There’s also one key feature on this too that has been a deal-killer for me on many other models: a viewfinder at the top. There are times when an LCD viewfinder on the back is too washed-out by the sun and a viewfinder lets you shoot old-school, with the image right in front of your eye. That has made a difference for me several times when shooting at a beach or on a boat. It also takes better low-light photos than any other automatic I have used. (It is rated “up to 6400″ for the ISO, but that comes with asterisks.) The photo below that I shot last night would be hard to capture with a basic point-and-shoot camera, but by adjusting the shutter speed on this one, done.

kodak night photo

In the weeks I have been using this camera, the annoyances and drawbacks have been pretty minor. The most constant one is that the lens cap pops off if you so much as breathe on it funny. Obviously with a larger lens and 12X zoom, this is not going to fit in your pocket. My biggest beef though is that you can’t charge the battery in the camera itself without order an optional adapter and though AAs will fit, the manual says only lithium batteries will work. So the other choice is to carry a bulky charger for the rechargeable lithium ion battery. The good news is, you can shoot for days after it’s fully charged.

The Kodak Z1012 IS lists for $250, but it routinely goes on sale at retailers and online sites. This is already about $100 less than comparable models from Canon and others, but I got mine for $200 on eBay and ended up with a slew of extras.

Note that there is a Z1015 model that is a little newer than this one and comes with a wide angle setting, but it is a bit heavier, costs a little more, and doesn’t record video sound in stereo. Very similar specs though. Compare the two at the Kodak site.


Search Kodak Z1012 IS prices

Kodak EasyShare Z1012 IS at Buy.com

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