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Panasonic DMC-LX1

Reviewed March 2006

Ergonomics

Introduction
Ergonomics
Characteristics
Image Quality
Interface & Software
Camera Views
Test Photos
Specifications
Our Opinion

The Panasonic DMC-LX1 has an 8.4 megapixel resolution, a 4X zoom and a 2.5 inch LCD monitor, but more interestingly, it is also the first camera in the world to use a 16:9 aspect ratio CCD, a format compatible with HDTV.

With the exception of the plastic cover door for the battery/card compartment and the top of the pop-up flash, which have a metallic texture, the camera is entirely clad in metal and shows excellent finishing.

Unusual for a compact, the LX1 has some of its selectors mounted on the lens barrel itself. At the top of the lens barrel, one selector, the Aspect Ratio Switch, serves to select any one of the 3 image aspect ratios the camera is able to produce:

  • 4:3: is the conventional aspect ratio that is used by most current digital cameras and which is common to standard television and computer monitors.
  • 3:2: is an aspect ratio that corresponds to most popular printing formats ( 4 x 6 and 5 x 7), and which avoids having to crop the image when it is printed.
  • 16:9: is an aspect ratio that is the same as HDTV.

Each of these ratios allows capturing images using different image sizes, and the selection for the image size is made in the camera's capture menu. (See the Characteristics section of the review for details.)

On the left side of the lens barrel, another selector, the Focus Switch, is dedicated to the Focus Mode. It has three settings:

  • AF: standard autofocus mode, which allows the camera to focus over a range of 50 cm (1.64 ft) to infinity when the zoom is at the wide angle end, and 120 cm (3.94 ft) to infinity at maximum telephoto.
  • AF Macro: allows the camera to focus on a subject as close as 5 cm (2 in.) when the zoom is a the widest angle, and from 30 cm (1 ft) onwards when the zoom is at the telephoto end.
  • MF: Manual Focus which offers the same broad focusing range as the macro mode. The camera displays the focus distances (in either meters or feet) on the right side of the monitor, and magnifies the central portion of the image to help the user focus.
Power Switch and the button to choose the Optical Stabilizer mode:

indicates that the stabilizer is turned off, best used when the camera is already stable, such as when it is mounted on a tripod.
Mode stabilizes the image continuously, allowing the user to see a stabilized image when framing the shot.
Mode 2, which offers better overall stabilization than Mode 1, but which stabilizes the image only at the moment of capture.

The Shutter Release and the Zoom Control around it are next. The shutter release is 2-stage, offering AE Lock and AF Lock when pressed and held halfway, while the zoom control also works in Playback, magnifying any part of an image in 3 steps up to 16X (4, 8, 16X) when pulled to the side, and displaying thumbnails of captured images (9, or 16, or 25 images per screen) when pushed to the side.

Next is the Mode Dial, which has 9 positions:

Auto Mode is an entirely automatic shooting mode, the user having only control over the image size and quality, and the use of the digital zoom.
Program AE lets the camera select the aperture and shutter speed, but allows the user to modify it with the joystick (see further) by selecting another combination of aperture and shutter speed that would result in a correctly exposed image.
Aperture Priority AE offers control over the aperture (from f2.8 to f8 at the wide angle end and f4.9 to f8 at the telephoto end) while the camera matches it to a shutter speed.
Shutter Priority AE provides a range that covers from 1/2000 second to 8 seconds while the camera matches the selection to an aperture.
Manual Exposure Mode provides control over both the shutter speed and the aperture, and offers and enhanced range of the shutter speed that has exposure times as long as 60 seconds.

Motion Picture Mode allows capturing video clips with sound (mono). Two image aspect ratios are available:

  • 4:3 Aspect (compatible with traditional televisions) captures video clips at VGA (640 x 480 pixels) or QVGA (320 x 240 pixels) at either 30 frames per second or 10 frames per second.
  • 16:9 Aspect (HDTV) captures a 848 x 480 pixel image at either 30 frames per second or 10 frames per second.

During recording the zoom, focus and aperture are fixed at the first frame. Also worth noting, the use of an SD (Secure Digital) card is necessary.

The other capture modes, SCN1 and SCN2 are separated from the others by the Playback mode.


These two mode dial settings provide access to the LX1's 14 Scene Modes, allowing a different mode to be set for each of these Mode Dial positions. When the dial is turned to either of these positions, a Scene selection menu is automatically displayed, a default that can be changed in the Setup section of the menu (see the Interface and Software section of the review). The Scene menu offers the following choices:

Portrait Soft Skin
Sports Candle Light
Food Party
Scenery Fireworks
Night Portrait

Snow

Night Scenery Starry Sky
Baby Self Portrait

The last button on top of the LX1 is at the other end, on the left side of the camera, and it serves to open the pop-up flash; and it is only when the flash is open that the flash modes (see further) can be selected.

The LX1's built-in flash has a range that starts at 60 cm and extends to 4.1 m (from 1.97 to 13.5 ft) when the CCD sensitivity is set to Auto.

All the other external controls of the LX1 are on the back of the camera, on the right of the 2.5 inch, 207,000 pixel monitor (there is no optical viewfinder).

At the top is a button labelled AF/AE Lock. By default the button locks both exposure and focus, avoiding having to hold the shutter release at mid-course to retain the shot parameters while recomposing the image. Moreover, the Capture menu (see the Characteristics section of the review) allows reprogramming the button so that it locks either the autofocus (AF-Lock), or the auto exposure (AE Lock), providing greater flexibility than can be had with the shutter release alone.

The next control, directly below, is the Joystick. It serves to select the aperture and shutter speed when the LX1 is set to P, S, A or M modes, to adjust the focus point when the camera is set to Manual Focus, and to flip through images in Playback.

In addition — and new on a Panasonic camera — when the joystick is pressed straight in, vertically, for more than one second, a new menu is displayed on the monitor that allows making quick changes to white balance, ISO sensitivity, image size and and type (see the Characteristics section for more information about the image types available on the LX1).

Next down is the 4-direction control, composed of five distinct buttons: four arced buttons forming a circle, and one at the centre labelled MENU which display the menu that corresponds to the current mode. Moreover, the four directional buttons that serve to navigate menus and review photos support additional functions, as indicated by icons:

The up arrow can be used when the camera is set to P, S, A, M and with some Scene modes, for:

  • Exposure Compensation (± 2 EV in 1/3 EV increments).
  • Performing Auto Bracketing, during which the camera captures 3 frames sequentially, one at the evaluated exposure, one underexposed by the selected amount, and one overexposed, using a range of ± 1 EV in 1/3 EV increments.
  • adjusting the white balance when it is set to a setting other than Auto, making it possible to push the white balance gently towards red or blue using a range of 10 steps in either direction.

And, when the camera is set to the Auto shooting mode, the button activates the Backlight option which automatically applies exposure compensation to capture a backlit subject.

The right arrow serves to select the Flash mode, but only if it has been manually opened: Auto, Auto with Red-eye Reduction, Forced On, Slow Sync. with Red-eye Reduction.

The down arrow starts the Review mode, which displays the last captured image for 10 seconds. And in this mode, while it is possible to magnify an image up to 8X, the Playback menu cannot be accessed.

And the left arrow starts the Self-timer with a 10-second delay with the first press and a 2-second timer when pressed a second time.

The two last buttons are beneath the 4-direction control, each having a dual role:

In the capture modes the button on the right starts one of three Burst modes:

High Speed captures 5 images at the highest JPEG image quality and the highest resolution at 3 frames per second.
Low Speed captures 5 images at the highest JPEG image quality and the highest resolution at 2 frames per second.
Unlimited captures JPEG images at 2 frames per second for as long as there is space on the memory card.
Set to the Playback or the Review modes, the button serves to delete images, either one at a time, or those that were selected using the Index (thumbnail) view.

The left side button controls the way information is displayed on the monitor, and the brightness of the backlight:

With the LX1 set to a capture mode, the default presentation shows the image coming from the lens with the shooting mode used superimposed on the top left of the screen, the flash mode and the stabilizer setting, then on the right the sensitivity, image size, aspect ratio, compression, battery state, and the brackets indicating the AF area.

Pressing the button once adds a histogram.

 

A second press of the button removes all information from the screen with the exception of the AF brackets and adds a composition grid. A third press of the button clears everything off the screen, with the exception of the AF brackets.

 

Set to the Playback mode, the image is presented with its resolution, aspect ratio, compression, battery state, file name, position within all the images on the card, and the capture date and time superimposed. A first press of the button adds the image's histogram, and the capture mode, aperture, shutter speed, ISO setting, flash mode, white balance, and date and time of capture for the image.

  A third press of the button clears the screen of all information.
Whatever the mode, holding down the button for more than one second increases the intensity of the monitor's backlight, improving its legibility outdoors. While pressing it again returns it to its normal brightness.

By the introduction of the DMC-LX1 Panasonic continues the integration and development of the 16:9 aspect format in digital cameras, a trend that has started to appear in the products of other manufacturers. This creates a camera that is interesting to use, as it offers new possibilities for framing images.

Ergonomically, the LX1's joystick takes a bit of effort to operate, but it soon becomes practical and turns out to be very effective.

Compare Prices for
Panasonic DMC-LX1/S 8.4 MP, 4x zoom Digital Camera
StoreSeller RatingsDescriptionPrice
RefurbDepotin stock$429.95
Introduction
Ergonomics
Characteristics
Image Quality
Interface & Software
Camera Views
Test Photos
Specifications
Our Opinion



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