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Lumix DMC-FZ5

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Panasonic Lumix DMC-FZ5


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Panasonic Lumix DMC-FZ5 Review at Imaging Resource
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Rating
Reviewed by: 

michaelbennett

( Professional)

Review Date
October 23, 2008

Overall Rating
 5 of 5

Value Rating
 5 of 5

Used product for
More than 1 year

Visitors rate this review
2.00 of 5,
3 votes

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Review 1 of 6

Price Paid:  $350.00 from CompuSmart

Summary:

I love it.

Strengths:

It produces fabulous images of everything from macro nature and fine art, taken just inches from the subject, to skyscrapers, printed to at least 8x10" flawlessly, in TIFF mode. The battery life is reasonably good and a second battery is inexpensive so I take both with me. There is a hood to shade the LCD view screen, which comes with the camera; this reminds me of shooting with my old Mamiya C330, Hasselblads, Bronicas, Yashicas, etc. It also protects the LCD screen from damage and is easily taken on and off with your thumb alone.
Color reproduction is superb. This is also the best low-light camera I've seen in my life, by far. The zoom reaches from mild wide angle to strong telephoto very quickly and there is practically no delay from pressing the shutter to hearing the camera fire.
This camera handles like a small, lightweight SLR and for most purposes, except Macro, you can shoot through the viewfinder and get what you want, rather than open the LDC gates at the back.

Weaknesses:

Could always have more capture ability. I would like more megapixels, who wouldn't?

Similar Products Used:

Samsung 2 megapixel digital.

Customer Service:

Never had any need for it, so I can't tell you. I do know that the retailer, CompuSmart, bent over double for me to nab the particular camera I'm using, since it was the last one available in all their stores in Canada, and it had to be imported from Edmonton for me. (Which is why I puchased my desktop, laptop, wireless modem card, software and camera from them - they know me and give me great service).



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Rating
Reviewed by: 

Ruhayat

( Casual)

Review Date
August 14, 2008

Overall Rating
 4 of 5

Value Rating
 3 of 5

Used product for
More than 1 year

Visitors rate this review
2.50 of 5,
2 votes

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Review 2 of 6

Price Paid:  $0.00 from Camera shop

Summary:

This was my second digital camera (the first was a Panasonic DMC-LC40). In terms of photo quality, I prefer those from the LC40 -- that camera used a Vario-Summicron f2.0 lens, compared to this one which is just a Vario-Elmarit f2.8. Apart from the bigger aperture, the LC40 also took sharper, contrasty photos which are more my cup of tea.

That said, this is a fair camera, small enough to throw in a bag and take with you anywhere. I once lent it to a girl I was interested in and she liked it so much she almost didn't give it back to me. So I suppose there's something to be said about a camera that makes a hot girl hot for it.

Here's a useful tip I discovered just a few weeks before I sold off this camera to a friend (who still uses it): use the Macro mode for just about everything, especially portraits of people. In my experience, Macro mode gave the sharpest photos I ever took on this camera with great colours.

Strengths:

Small and light.

Weaknesses:

Hard to take action shots of people walking.

Similar Products Used:

Leica D-Lux 3, Ricoh GR-D, Leica Digilux 2, Nikon D70, Nikon D50, Panasonic DMC-LC40



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Rating
Reviewed by: 

rotoghost

( Intermediate)

Review Date
December 14, 2007

Overall Rating
 4 of 5

Value Rating
 5 of 5

Used product for
More than 1 year

Visitors rate this review
3.50 of 5,
2 votes

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Review 3 of 6

Price Paid:  $250.00 from Ebay

Summary:

Like cameras of this class, the noise at anything over ISO 100 is, to my eye, unmanageable. That said, with its marginal (not exceptional) image stabilization, you can pull some fantastic shots from this camera. Long exposures (max of 8 seconds), for instance, look stellar. The color saturation is good, the contrast is good, exposure tends to err on the side of under (no blown highlights). Some may find it gimmicky, but the black and white mode has its place in this camera, and actually turns out very smooth, pleasant images (much better than say, taking a color shot, and desaturating it). With its lack of manual focus, and an LCD that doesn't gain-up in near dark conditions, shooting in low light can be frustrating. The good news is, you can lock the focus once you've found your target.

The camera doesn't allow for separate adjustment of contrast/saturation and sharpness, rather rolling all three into a single setting. The "Natural" setting tends to look soft-focus, a little too soft-focus... you know, as if you forgot to focus. Normal is fine for everything else, paired with a bit of photoshop you can bring out the saturation and contrast you wished you had in-camera. Vivid is a bit ham-fisted in its approach, the sharpness is just too much, and details become a chromatic mess. My only real/daily gripe with the camera is the shutter button, which is recessed a bit too far into the zoom dial. What this tends to do to me in real-world shooting is cause me to push harder to actuate the shutter, which inevitably moves the featherweight camera, and causes blur (more than the "Mega" OIS can handle).

On the subject of the flash - the built in is, as usual with point-n-shoot cameras, fairly harsh. The effective range is around 5 - 10 feet (that's pushing it). Personally, I built a little flash diffuser for when I'm using mine... a couple bucks in foam-core and cloth made a tremendous difference. The range is crippled even further by this diffuser, but the pictures look great.

I have worked with one of the Lumix FZ5's direct competitors, the Canon S2, quite a bit as well. Having daily use/access to both does gives me the perspective that, though the Lumix is notably slower responding and has fewer "toys" (like color swapping), I still would choose the Lumix for the pictures it turns out (and in the end, that's what really counts).

Strengths:

- good low noise images at ISO 80
- great zoom range (same with its competitors)
- fantastic long exposure results
- wonderfully smooth pictures in black and white mode
- lightweight and fairly compact
- comes with 55mm adapter for filters (one less thing to buy if you need a circular polarizer or other filter)
- focus lock
- very fast focus
- excellent battery life
- manual white balance
- great value/performance in the super-zoom category of cameras

Weaknesses:

- very noisy at ISO higher than 100
- functional, but not great, image stabilization
- no manual focus
- auto white balance isn't terribly good
- lack of ability to adjust contrast / sharpness / saturation separately
- no hot shoe
- shutter release is recessed too far

Similar Products Used:

Canon S2

Customer Service:

Never had a problem with this camera...



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Rating
Reviewed by: 

jewels

( Intermediate)

Review Date
November 10, 2006

Overall Rating
 4 of 5

Value Rating
 4 of 5

Used product for
More than 1 year

Visitors rate this review
3.00 of 5,
2 votes

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Review 4 of 6

Price Paid:  $400.00 from buydig

Summary:

this was my step before I went dslr. It is a long zoom IS camera with lots of manual settings. Colors are NOT oversaturated, needs a bit of PS afterwards. Took me several months of tweaking before I was happy with results, but very happy with camera now. One camera cannot do it all, but this is very good because it is light, relatively small and has IS. People complain about exposure/focus etc on the long end....hello..you are zoomed at the long end of 420mm and it still has f3.3 AND IS. Use long zoom in sunlight, it's my surfing camera and does it's job very well. If you don't mind the bulk, go dslr. For it's uses, its a light durable camera with a good lens and IS. Uses 55mm filters, but attaches to long extender.

Strengths:

420mm
IS works wonderfully
leica lens
durable, dropped many times
menu, user friendly knobs
long battery life
full manual settings, sans the hotshoe and manual focus
very good macro
small, light
fast start-up

Weaknesses:

don't like the attachment for filters/hood, quite long
video not as good as canon's
poor iso - 400 no usable imo 80/100 good...use i.s.
wish evf (viewfinder) was bigger

Similar Products Used:

canon a520
canon a70
nikon d50
film cameras

Customer Service:

non used



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Rating
Reviewed by: 

Lionheart

( Intermediate)

Review Date
July 13, 2005

Overall Rating
 3 of 5

Value Rating
 3 of 5

Used product for
0-1 years

Visitors rate this review
3.43 of 5,
3 votes

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Review 5 of 6

Price Paid:  $500.00 from B&H PhotoVideo

Summary:

Mixed feelings on this one. I love the convenience of the 12x optical zoom, but the low light performance is pathetique. I had hoped that the combination of small size and weight plus the extended range of the Leica zoom lens would allow me to replace my 1D Mk II and all my "L" lenses for 90% or more of my photo needs. Sadly, this camera does not live up to my rather stringent requirements for an advanced digital camera at this level.

Strengths:

Lightweight, very portable, 12x optical zoom. Good image quality at ISO 80 and 100, good sharpness at most focal lengths, especially at the shorter end. Great range in one package.

Weaknesses:

WEAK at the long end of the zoom. NOISY at ISO 200 and 400. The LCD is unreadable in low light, very underexposed images in low light settings. The onboard flash is pathetic, the camera build is cheap. No ability to add an external flash.

Similar Products Used:

Canon G1, G2. My main camera system is a Canon EOS-1D Mk II, 10D, D60, and a wide range of "L" zooms and primes.



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