Reviews for Canon PowerShot S2 IS 5 Megapixel Compact Camera - Silver1.8" LCD - 12x Optical Zoom - 2592 x 1944 Image - 640 x 480 Video - PictBridge - MPN: 9883A001
By member:
mountainlighting
- Nov 30, 2007
IStrengths: Everything on this camera is great. Weakness: Nothing. This is the best camera you can buy for the money, period. I love it! I love the quality of the images and the optical zoom! Gives you options of a more expensive camera. Did you find it helpful or unhelpful? Top
By member:
golddragonfly
- Feb 7, 2007
Fantastic Ultra Zoom camera for all purposesStrengths: Super Ergonomic design and ease of operation, great zoom and lenses, plenty of automatic and manual settings, DVD quality video with stereo sound, AA batteries, Canon warranty Weakness: A tad smallish LCD, and that's about it... Greetings, reader!
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By member:
Oldchris
- Jan 16, 2007
What a dealStrengths: Fabulous -- marvelous detail -- will do many more things than described in the reviews -- terrific movies Weakness: Well, I wish it had a plug in or a hot shoe for an additional flash. After buying this camera last April, I was immediately sstonished at the quality and ease of use. It amazes me that folks will buy cameras with a 3x optical zoom, when for about the same money they could buy this one with a 12x optical zoom -- and I assure you that it is really handy when shooting from the first base toward the short stop. Did you find it helpful or unhelpful? Top
By member:
cheap_mike
- Aug 2, 2006
S2 IS : Pretty Good CameraStrengths: Relatively inexpensive ($285 BB w/coupons, July 2006), lens, video capability, 4 GB SD (1500 shots@high quality), image stabilization, AA batteries (not proprietary) Weakness: Auto mode is horrible, no warning that battery is low, the included software is not great, the viewfinder is a bit low resolution (not optical) I really like this camera, it is an upgrade from my Kodak DX-4330. It works fine with 4 GB SD card (1500 shots / 30 minutes video). The Auto mode is horrible, for indoor shots it seems to lock the exposure at 1/60th second, which is way too slow for a zoomed image. 89% of readers found this review helpful. Did you find it helpful or unhelpful? Top
By member:
j_h
- Jul 7, 2006
Top of the line point-and-shoot!!!!Strengths: *An SLR-like camera for less than half the SLR price *Superb 12x zoom with IS *5.0MP CCD sensor *Uses SD format Weakness: *Bulky *No bulb mode *Noise at higher ISOs For anyone who wants the features of an SLR without the price tag of an SLR, this is THE ULTIMATE camera for you! It packs a 12x zoom with 5 megapixels for stunning clarity! The image stabilization keeps all pictures crisp, whether close-up or far away (keep it on shoot only for best performance). The LCD swivels to close for protection, and the EVF lets people used to an optical viewfinder still use one - but with more precision and information overlay! 99% of readers found this review helpful. Did you find it helpful or unhelpful? Top
By anonymous - Jun 9, 2006
Canon PowerShot S2 IS 5 Megapixel Compact Camera -...Strengths: 12X zoom, manual controls as well as auto, stunning pictures, stitch and special photo options. Weakness: When using the zoom, batteries don't last as long as is stated on advertisements. The PowerShot S-2 is awesome. I bought it to take to Alaska on my 25th anniversary. I took over 200 shots and only had one or two turn blurry, and that was as much my fault as the cameras. I was very pleased at the nice pictures inside without a flash, usually on my old one, you couldn't even make out anything, but this camera swept me away. It's not as compact as you can get now with most other digital cameras, but I'll sacrifice that for the 12X Zoom with the stabilizer. I found myself taking two shots of everything, one normal and one zoom. I am very happy. The only thing I would have done different is went ahead and purchased the S3 instead, to have the higher megapixels. Did you find it helpful or unhelpful? Top
By member:
touristguy87
- Jun 7, 2006
Not bad. Not worth all the fanStrengths: solidly-built, well engineered for shooting, fast, clean at low ISOs, good battery life, tilt-out screen, reliable focus, easy to shoot with one hand in all modes Weakness: it's a big-un, heavy, no live histogram (minor), the flash is not locked down...and the viewfinder location is really poor I could go into long detail about this but the S2 is just too big for what it gives you in terms of performance and image quality. It has good color, very realistic color although with a slight reddish-brown tint (that, by the way, really gets old, especially in sunlit shots). It has too much sharpening, the focus system is borderline adequate, a soft lens, too much size and weight and a crappy lens cap that is more like a lens hat than a lens cap. For slightly more size, weight and cost you can get a real DSLR, that won't limit you to ISO50-200 shooting. If you're willing to compromise on the zoom you can get an A610 or A640 and get better image quality, if you are willing to compromise slightly on the color accuracy you can get an FZ5 or SP500 and get a lighter, smaller camera with a better lens cap (this is true with any camera on the market except the s3) that still has a good zoom range and decent image quality, plus a better lens. Even the EVF sucks on this camera. Its sole area of greatness is in being a good "jack of all trades" camera. Does that mean that it is good for you? Well, if you're an amateur who is willing to carry a brick around, and baby it? Maybe so. But you can do better in so many ways. Truly this is the 4-door Toyota Camry of cameras. 90% of readers found this review helpful. Did you find it helpful or unhelpful? Top
Reply by member: touristguy87
Jun 7, 2006 ...it does not matter if you use the extra pixels or not in terms of file settings, a higher-resolution camera with a bigger sensor or at least a greater number of pixels on the same-size sensor, will give you a more natural-looking photo. The extra pixel information helps to improve the image processing.
Reply by member: touristguy87
Jun 26, 2006 Please forgive me for qualifying all of my comments, such:
Reply by member: touristguy87
Jul 2, 2006 7/3/06 minor update :)
Reply by member: touristguy87
Jul 2, 2006 one important thing :)
Reply by member: touristguy87
Jul 8, 2006 um, a big discovery...
Reply by member: touristguy87
Jul 22, 2006 s2, fz5 and sp-500 at full zoom, program, highest resolution mode.
Reply by member: touristguy87
Jul 22, 2006 oops, at iso100, handheld, no IS.
Reply by member: touristguy87
Jul 22, 2006 ...you know, the s2 really could use alignment lines, the big flashing message when you use a hypothetical dedicated ISO button, and the cool dark gray color...like the s3 :)
Reply by member: touristguy87
Jul 30, 2006 ...I took *both* my s2 and my fz5 up to Manhattan today :) Part 2 of a two-parter, one to compare an a700 to an s4, the other to compare the s2 to the fz5, shooting in and around Manhattan. I knew the s2 would be sharper but I wanted to see how much of a factor the 9-point multi-area focus plus the lighter speed and handling of the fz5 was compared to the limited area adjustment of the focus point plus the heavier weight and bulk of the s2 plus the goofy lenscap was in terms of shooting in and around Manhattan. I knew that both were reasonably competent when shooting around DC or up at the Inner Harbor.
Reply by member: touristguy87
Jul 31, 2006 ....please take that last comment with a grain of salt as the per-pixel color accuracy depends a LOT on the Q setting used for the jpeg file.
Reply by member: touristguy87
Jul 31, 2006 ...one more grain of salt :)
Reply by member: touristguy87
Aug 1, 2006 ...for sure, I am running a sineh filter, to lighten the exposure and bring out dark detail without crunching the highlights, as well as an edge filter to sharpen, on just about all the wide-angle shots that I took in Manhattan in the mid to late afternoon when the sun was hidden by the buildings but the sky was still bright. For the a700, the fz5, and the s2 too.
Reply by member: touristguy87
Aug 14, 2006 ...ah, well. I just returned the a700 and ordered another brand-new sp-500 as the one I sold to Adorama in NYC has already been sold, ironically for what they cost new....twice what they gave me for mine, which was in as-new condition. A quick $125 lesson.
Reply by member: touristguy87
Aug 14, 2006 ...ah, well. I just returned the a700 and ordered another brand-new sp-500 as the one I sold to Adorama in NYC has already been sold, ironically for what they cost new....twice what they gave me for mine, which was in as-new condition. A quick $125 lesson.
Reply by member: touristguy87
Aug 14, 2006 (don't hit "submit" twice).
Reply by member: touristguy87
Aug 28, 2006 ok here we go...after shooting around in Greenwich Village Sunday, on a cloudy day, with the sp500, s2 and fz5...I'm pretty convinced of what I said about too much noise-reduction in the s2, and it is especially true in the fz5. The sp500 has moderate noise-reduction and that preserves a lot of detail, it seems to behave like the others at ISO400, boosting signal and luminace noise with a loss of textures and low-level color resolution. But at ISO200 or lower it is the only one of the three that preserves fine detail and texture. Even at ISO50 the s2 has crushing NR, the fz5 even worse, it is almost noise-free at ISO400 and the noise is undetectable to my eyes at ISO80-200, you can imagine how much NR is there at ISO80-200, and that is why the sp500 makes better-looking photos. Then the color is a little more "vibrant" than the s2 and more true to life than the fz5, so under night lights you get great-looking shots too. The downside is that the sp500 flares a little under extreme bright lights reflecting off white or metallic surfaces, not as much as the fz5 but still some. The s2 controls color extremes best in these situations while the fz5 is "brassy" and the sp500 is a little "peachy". But in almost all other light, shooting ISO80-200, the sp500 is clearly the most photo-realistic of the bunch. As it gets too dark, as the shot darkens, the textures get dark and the fine detail too dark to see, that advantage goes away, you are left to survive shooting by lights and here the fz5 and s2 can compete effectively. But still, if the light is good, or you shoot from a rest, the sp500 wins again. And again, I am speaking of the difference between leather seats and cloth seats. Sometimes cloth is better. But leather always looks good even when it is not practical. The fz5 is much more of a "throw it in your bag with an extra battery and/or the charger, hit the highway, whip it out and take shots" camera, it even has a great little screen, not too big or too small and with great resolution and brightness giving you a good view of what you shoot (frankly the shots will look better on the camera LCD than on your computer monitor), and I found that it will even fit in my pants pocket, even with that big 12x F3.3 zoom lens. It is by far the fastest of the three in burst mode, even with standard SD and shooting 5MP high-res it will click off 4 shots in no time. At night, shoot it ISO200 in S mode with the IS on and at something around 1/20 and it will do a good job of documenting your travels for you. I fully admit that there are times and there are shots that you will have the fz5 and know that you will need the s2 at least to get a good-looking shot, mainly shooting faraway, reflective subjects in bright light. The s2 is a lot more labor-intensive, bulky and heavy, due the larger size and weight, the flip-out screen and the cheesy lens cap and no guidelines on the viewfinder. Its real benefit is in the flexibility and the fact that it will give you "a decent looking shot under a wide range of conditions". Sort of a "techno"-looking shot, if you can deal with that, but well-controlled. It's high-speed burst is slow enough so that you can click off two-shot bursts with ease. The sp500 is for taking photographs. It has a burst mode but between the slow burst speed and the small cache and slow write to XD you can stall the camera easily just by taking a few bursts in close succession. It is not a "sport camera", even worse ISO400 halves the shot speed (this is one thing that is different about this new sp500 I have, the older ones are not like this). Remember you can buy SD almost anywhere, and only now is a 2GB XD card coming on the market.
Reply by member: touristguy87
Sep 11, 2006 "if this camera (the s2) were the size and weight of my dmc-fz5, with a better lens cap (like the fz5 :), and the viewfinder out to the left (like the fz5 :) it would be perfect."
Reply by member: touristguy87
Sep 11, 2006 ...the one thing with this camera, you will not look at the shots and say the colors look funky.
Reply by member: touristguy87
Sep 27, 2006 so, I found peace with it...the colors are generally accurate and it does not scare...I shoot it at ISO50 ( I shoot all my cameras at the highest resolution now, all the time, at the lowest ISO possible given the shutter speed and the zoom setting) with the IS on continuous mode, all the time, only bumping up the ISO for full-zoom shots or up to ISO200 when it drops down below 1/30s. I generally don't bother shooting it at IS0400 (it's too noisy for that, except with a lot of streetlight to cover the noise) and I really try hard to stay at ISO50. Also I set the contrast and saturation down a notch using custom colors, thus increasing the dynamic range and avoiding overcolorization.
Reply by member: touristguy87
Sep 27, 2006 Just to show what the 12x zoom means. I took this at 1600x1200, 2MP, standing about 20 feet away while it was swimming around in a poind. It was amazingly difficult...I'm trying to take it at ISO200, not 400, to keep the noise down...and it's moving, and I'm pointing down at the ground, there was not a lot of light to be shooting a full-zoom shot...but I wasn't sure it was fast enough, so I ended up shooting it at 1/125 f3.5 iso200 with slightly less than full zoom, and 1/250 f3.5 iso400 at full zoom, both with continuous IS. See if you can tell the difference from these crops.
Reply by member: touristguy87
Sep 27, 2006 ...I almost never read the other reviews (who cares about what I say about the features, you can read about them on the corporate website) but I just glanced over one and I saw the guy say "with the price of SD nowadays, why not shoot at superfine all the time?"
Reply by member: touristguy87
Sep 27, 2006 one last thing...regardless of what I wrote, to keep this short too...all of the cameras I talked about have problems with too much noise reduction wiping away the fine detail in shots in places where there is not a lot of light intensity. Even the sp500. The A700 has another problem of the jpeg q settings being so low that color noise is added by the compression. There are problems in the following areas. Excessive NR kills fine detail especially where the shots are "brown" or darker. Low-contrast regions are washed of detail. Excessive *contrast* in the image processing kills the shot by overblowing the bright areas (so that whites are no longer white, they are some funky beige color) and overdarkening the dark areas (so that the shadows are blacked out). Excessive *saturation* kills the shot by making the bright colors look, well, "fake". Overlit. Over bright. Just too much color. *Then* you can have color noise and compression artifacts...then with the TZ1 there is some sort of internal reflection problem (the type that is solved with an ED coating on a good lens), some "hazing" in bright light, that seems to come from the prizm they use to shorten the lens. Then with the fz5 and the s4, say, you can have flare problems where the sun gets into the lens, directly, making occasionally "cool" but sometimes problematic purple zones on the shot.
Reply by member: touristguy87
Sep 27, 2006 ...also don't forget that you can brighten dark shots and sharpen dull shots with a decent image-processing program. Learn something about digital filtering and how it works on photographs. Learn about log filters and edge and sharpen filters and noise filters for those cases where you forgot to set the ISO back down. You can fix a lot of problem shots with these.
Reply by member: touristguy87
Nov 2, 2006 1/250 f4.5 ISO200 center-weighted average, 6.8mm zoom (about 40mm in 35mm format), fine quality...definitely not a good one for ISO200. Too much color noise and "grit", especially with only fine. And too much loss of fine detail. The full size shot is 1600x1200 and it's just short of a "watercolor" photo. The colors are in the right places but everything is smoothed-out.
Reply by member: touristguy87
Nov 15, 2006 shot this in spot mode under a balcony on a sunny day. Crop and downsampled full image, from a fine-mode 5MP shot.
Reply by member: touristguy87
Nov 15, 2006 last comment...I was reading the other reviews hoping to spot something that I missed, if you see anything please let me know :) somehow...
Reply by member: touristguy87
Nov 15, 2006 iso50 evaluative, about an hour before dark. 23mm in the camera (about 200mm in 35mm format). Sharpness, saturation, contrast down to -1, fine mode, 5MP downsampled ect. I guess that IS was on. I usually turn it on if a stable image is at all a question.
Reply by member: touristguy87
Nov 15, 2006 The second thing that it could really use is a horizontal and vertical grating.
Reply by member: touristguy87
Nov 16, 2006 handheld iso200 2MP shot cropped and downsampled. 1-fifth second exposure with IS on, f2.8.
Reply by member: touristguy87
Nov 16, 2006 oops, those last two (the slightly brown ones) are from an fz5. Here are the correct images.
Reply by member: touristguy87
Nov 17, 2006 well, you can never say enough about a good thing, right?
Reply by member: touristguy87
Nov 19, 2006 ok I am now a firm believer in 5MP superfine mode.
Reply by member: touristguy87
Nov 25, 2006 one thing I'd like to add, I think the images coming off this camera are oversharpened significantly...also under zoom the colors begin to look pastel and there's a little bluriness to the left of center.
Reply by member: touristguy87
Nov 25, 2006 So I have no more comments to make about the image quality or features of this camera, no more samples to post. It will take good shots, if slightly oversharpened, and significantly over noise-reduced. My main beef with it is the size and weight. Just going to the A700 means half the weight, half the battery weight, half the depth, and less width, plus no lenscap worries. You lose the flip LCD but you would rarely shoot off it anyway and most of the time it is more of a pain than a benefit. You lose the EVF, but so what, just shoot off the LCD. The only time you will really want the s2 is when it begins to get dark, and you are forced to use ISO400 or 800 on the a700. You would almost never use the full zoom or the tilt feature of the LCD...so try to forget about them. The A700 is, by far, a much better deal, even at the same price, for most people. And a great gift for those who have no real urge to take pictures but wouldn't mind having a good easy to use camera that will indeed take good photos.
Reply by member: touristguy87
Nov 26, 2006 one last comment, when the image is a little "burnt-looking"?
Reply by member: touristguy87
Nov 28, 2006 I just have to post this one because it looks so good.
Reply by member: touristguy87
Nov 29, 2006 I should add that the previous shot was in superfine mode iso50.
Reply by member: touristguy87
Nov 29, 2006 I meant to post the full-size shot downsampled, not the same 640x480 crop twice...
Reply by member: touristguy87
Nov 29, 2006 ...I think the difference between the quality of the focus in my comment #15 vs #16 is obvious.
Reply by member: touristguy87
Nov 29, 2006 ...I don't know, I guess that I've just taken too many photos with other cameras that have come out good, and too many with this camera that were nothing special, and too many times I've felt that it is just too big and heavy and the lens cap is too hokey, to be worth it because of the image quality...but I have to admit that I have found some really good looking shots that I have taken with this camera over the past 9 months, simply because I have been trying to find out exactly what it can do that's better than my other ones. I mean, "now I know", but still. I hate the lens cap. It annoys me that a $500 camera can have such a cheesy lens cap over such a valuable part of the camera. And it does weigh substantially more than any other camera that I've ever owned. And the text in the viewfinder screen is really too small. Would I rather have an s3? I don't know. I think that I got lucky...the s3 really does have noticable color noise in all ISO modes. And it has the same cheesy lenscap. Otherwise the s3 looks really cool. But they didn't fix the *problems* had with the s2 (except for the small text), they just made it better-looking. Also it needs a sunscreen over the viewfinder eyepiece. That hard rubber thing just protects the camera from your skull, I end up switching eyes just to block the light.
Reply by member: touristguy87
Nov 29, 2006 well this last one and that's it.
Reply by member: touristguy87
Nov 29, 2006 "...I don't know, I guess that I've just taken too many photos with other cameras that have come out good, and too many with this camera that were nothing special, "
Reply by member: touristguy87
Nov 30, 2006 "when a little bit of knowledge is dangerous" :)
Reply by member: touristguy87
Dec 3, 2006 ...last word: neither the a700 nor the fz5 can match the s2 in terms of all-around image quality, and in fact for the occasional wide-angle shot I do wish that the FZ5 were better. But even then it is not all that bad, and for most other shots it is fine, they are about the same. It is more a matter of getting the exposure right than any fundamental flaw in the FZ5, though it does have fundamental image flaws, it simply is not as sharp, crisp and clean as the S2 when shooting wide-angle. It really, really really needs a lower compression setting, wtih a mere 4:1 compression it is impossible to take really good, high-resolution "photographs" with the FZ5. But the FZ5 is a lot more fun to carry and shoot than the s2. Half because of the bulk, and half because of the lens cap. It is just really nice to not have to worry about the lens cap falling off because it is so loose, or worry about dropping the camera itself because it is so big and heavy, when you pull the camera out of the bag, and you have to carry the s2 in a bag, it is too big for a pocket...especially with that cheesy lens cap, you can't carry it in your pocket. Not to mention the 9-point AF of the FZ5 compared to the spot focus of the S2. So *using* the S2 becomes this big production. I get to the point where I don't even want to deal with it.
Reply by member: touristguy87
Dec 3, 2006 This is how I think that it is best to look at the s2.
Reply by member: touristguy87
Dec 16, 2006 plus I would remind you to take a look at reply #23 here, because if the s2 has one glaring weakness other than the lens cap, it is the long-exposure night performance. It seems to shoot fuzzy long exposures, definitely needs to be shot at ISO50 to maximize image resolution but that also lengthens the exposure. While it is "competent", I would not reach for this camera first for night shots.
Reply by member: touristguy87
Jan 8, 2007 I hope that I have said enough, because it seems that there will be little more said, in any case :) shoot it at ISO50 and superfine mode if at all possible...
Reply by member: touristguy87
Jan 8, 2007 And the full-size shot downsampled to 640x480 from 5MP.
Reply by member: touristguy87
Jan 8, 2007 er, response #48 are crops from a iso 50, 100 and 200 series.
Reply by member: touristguy87
Jan 8, 2007 here is an example of where the s2 is "easy lovin" and the fz5 is "tough lovin". These are 640x480 crops of 5MP wide angle shots at full 12x optical zoom, two shots of the same subject (with some small changes due to the different days) but both at the lowest ISO and both at EV0. FZ5 iso80 1-400 f5 standard mode fine res, s2 iso50 1-125 f5 superfine with the contrast down a notch (and in standard mode the fz5 has the sharpness and saturation down a notch). IS on with both. IS is very, very very useful :) saved my bacon right here with the s2. And the fz5 of course very sensitive to camera shake at full zoom. Also I sharpened both shots manually, the same amount. Anyway you can see right here what the game is between the two. The s2 at almost half the ISO and about a third of the speed gives a brighter, punchier shot which clearly has better image processing and in fact looks less fuzzy (plus you can clearly see the price that you pay with the fz5 in terms of loss of fine detail even at ISO80). But look at the line edges and coloring of the fz5 shot. The overall optical quality is better with the fz5 shot, even if there are specific *image* qualities that are better with the s2. Now, one more thing. These are 100% crops of 5MP shots. If you look at the full 5MP shot what you see with the Fz5 shot is a darker shot with more "severe" coloring but very clean lines, and the s2 shot is lighter and more colorful but it looks like it's been soaked in water for 5 minutes. How much of that is due to the low shutter-speed? I doubt any of it. I would say that without a doubt, given some gamma enhancement or some sort of lightening and a little noise-scrubbing, the FZ5 shot looks better than the S2 shot. It is only at high res when pixel-peeping that you can see the extra fine-detail in the s2 shot and you can see the noise and graininess of the FZ5 shot (and the same goes for the Canon A700, the two are quite similar in terms of image quality). I mean, really. The less detail in the shot (or the closer you are to the subject) and the better the lighting, the more the FZ5 looks better compared to the s2. Cut the light or increase the overall detail and the s2 wins hands-down. But, again, only if you shoot at the lowest ISO! Once you raise the ISO all bets are off. I would bet that you pay a much higher price for shooting at high ISO than you do for shooting normal or fine instead of superfine. And THAT is where these f2.8-f3.6 12x IS stabilized cameras kick butt over the smaller point and shoots with their f2.8-f4.1 3x or even f3-f5 3x lenses, without IS even, and you can imagine what a 35mm full-frame sensor will do compared to the itty-bitty sensor in the s2 and fz5. What is killing them is the low signal to noise ratio and the higher NR. In exchange you get a slightly smaller and much cheaper camera than a DSLR. But, really, the FZ5 is a much better image-quality vs size tradeoff than the s2. Even though the s2 certainly has at least as good and usually better image quality than the FZ5. You just have to remember not to ask too much from the FZ5. For most shots its just fine. For a few shots, wide-angle long-range landscape shots, you really will want an s2. At least. If not a DSLR. And for a few others, under high zoom, because of the superior lens optical quality and geometric fidelity, you will want the FZ5 *instead* of the s2. But there is no doubt that these two cameras will produce significantly different photos of the same subject. The thing is, sometimes that's good for the fz5, and sometimes that's good for the s2. In the long run it kinda balances out. The s2 will always take a cleaner, more detailed shot than the fz5...if...it is shot at ISO50. Above that all bets are off. And for long-range wide-angle shooting that cleanliness pays dividends, so about half the time the s2 is better, but when shooting tight on the subject the fz5 is better because of the better lines and the reduced effect of loss of fine-detail. And it is FAR easier to carry and shoot than the s2. You just have to realize, and accept, that some of the FZ5 shots will not look all that great when viewed close-up. So...don't view them from close-up. And for some s2 shots, that trick will not work so well because there is an optical problem not an image-detail problem. You'll say, "great camera, but I wish that it had a better lens". And life will go on. I mean, as good as the s2 is, it is not a G6 or Rebel XTi. It will get overwhelmed and screw up a shot, sooner or later. They all do.
Reply by member: touristguy87
Jan 8, 2007 and the fullsize 5MP shots, darker one is the fz5 shot.
Reply by member: touristguy87
Jan 8, 2007 oops the crops that I forgot to post from two messages ago
Reply by member: touristguy87
Jan 8, 2007 think that I have it slightly backwards. You want the s2 over the fz5 when low-level fine-detail is really important, as in when you are shooting in really tight on a finely-detailed scene (tight enough to see the fine detail). Otherwise, the straight lines, the optical accuracy that you get from the fz5, win the day. The wider the shot and the lower the scene contrast and fine detail, the more discernable lines and curves, the better the fz5 looks compared to the s2. It sure as hell doesn't always look worse than the s2. Optically the FZ5 is better, but it has much stronger NR, in exchange. That is not a problem if there is not much "fine detail" to be seen in the first place, then you can't see how badly it is being scrubbed out. Doesn't mean that this is not a problem at all with the s2, though, and, trust me, it is a problem with the s2. The nightmare for the s2 owner is when they take a shot that is wide-angle enough and far enough away from the subject where they can't see any fine detail, really, and there isn't a lot of color in it, but they can see all the optical distortion from the lens. Anything shot near or after dusk, or shooting towards the sun into shade, for example. Anything below "brown", or dark "chalk", all that soft-shaded light detail, the s2 will sort of lightly blend away. Admittedly the FZ5 will totally smudge it out, but at least what is left will be clean and have good lines :)
Reply by member: touristguy87
Jan 15, 2007 ...I have to admit that I am sick and tired of dealing with the lens cap of this camera. It is like a wild child, you never quite know where it is and where it's going to go and you always have to keep a hand on it when you take the camera in and out of the bag. That is a serious pain in the butt, in and of itself.
Reply by member: touristguy87
Jan 20, 2007 hm, how about a full 12x zoom iso50 autobracket sample for you...with the ev0 shot at 1/70s, ev+0.7 at 1/30s...handheld. In the freaking 40F cold and wind. I was floored. I even more impressed than before. I still see a little "chalking" but no "watercoloring" and there definitely is a lot of sharpness in the output from this camera. Probably a little too much. I turned the contrast down a notch, time for the sharpness to come down a notch too. I cannot tell you how much better the jpeg output of this camera is than the RAW output from my SP500. Cleaner, sharper, better colors...I have yet to match it with the CS2 raw converter. Though the raw output is a little cleaner, optically, with none of that "chalky" overprocessing that I see in jpeg files from the sp500 and to a lesser extent from the s2. Oh, have I said this before, the FZ5 reaches its limits much sooner. It may have better IS but the FZ5 gets very chalky when the s2 is chugging right along.
Reply by member: touristguy87
Feb 14, 2007 ok, to cross-pollinate...I've been playing a lot with Photoshop CS2 and the HSV settings in Lviewpro...what this camera, the FZ5, seems to do and do often, during the day, is overexpose, significantly. My SP500 overexposes too but not so much, and of course the S2 least of all. The thing is though that the s2 seems to be a bit "fluty" with the images, like its too fancy, just a bit too much image processing...there's a definite reddish-brown shift to the shots from both cameras, but with the s2 it is a lighter "bronze" vs the FZ5s orange-brown, and no doubt the image lines are less "processed" and more subdued and straighter with the FZ5. It has more grit and grain than the s2 but the image lines are cleaner. No doubt on some shots the FZ5 crashes and shows its limits, mainly on shots with a lot of contrast, with really wide dynamic range. Partially because it significantly overexposes, partially because the noise-reduction threshold is a little higher than with the S2. But this happens on maybe 1% of the shots, and a lot less if you auto-bracket. In any case, 9 times out of ten, dropping the value or brightness setting until the lowlights are just above black and you can still see some detail in them, then bumping the contrast up a little and then sharpening turns an average-looking FZ5 shot into a shot that looks pretty nice. There is the occasional FUBAR shot, and no doubt it needs to be kept under control (overexposing means that it shoots slow) but all in all this camera is actually pretty decent. Not great, I would never say that (even if there wasn't any lens flare). But not bad. For example, it has very reliable focus, something that shouldn't be taken for granted. It is very clean even at ISO400. It really struts its stuff in moderate to low light, shots with moderate contrast. Paradoxically. But it does tend to screw around with the exposure a little too much, and almost demands that you use auto-bracketing. The S2 is almost so accurate in its metering that autobracketing really only helps with the occasional high contrast shot. But I think the fundamental image geometry is better with the FZ5. The lines are just crisper, cleaner, more subtle...not overstated. Like the difference between a trumpet and a coronet. Though no doubt it has heavy NR and occasionally you will pay the price for that in terms of smudged fine detail and narrow dynamic range.
Reply by member: touristguy87
Feb 14, 2007 ...would I sell my s2? No.
Reply by member: touristguy87
Feb 23, 2007 ok, let's tidy up a little, as you know that I couldn't have quit playing around with these after a year :)
Reply by member: touristguy87
Feb 23, 2007 this may help, here's the fz5 in standard mode...with the sharpness and saturation at normal.
Reply by member: touristguy87
Feb 23, 2007 last two...
Reply by member: touristguy87
Feb 23, 2007 Just to make it clear the shots (from the last 3 replies) with the snow in them, are the fz5 in standard mode (with the sharpness at normal).
Reply by member: touristguy87
Feb 23, 2007 at the highest image quality possible from each camera, short of shooting raw in the sp500.
Reply by member: touristguy87
Feb 28, 2007 Let me make it as clear as possible :)
Reply by member: touristguy87
Mar 6, 2007 Here are, specifically, the s2 crops. Apologies. I'm pretty sure the first one in the response above is the s2 crop. But anyway these 3 are definitely s2 crops. Again with the softness and contrast down. So, I bought an a710 this weekend and while it does have some chroma noise as well as noticeable luminance noise at ISO800, it is just about what I want. Small, light, quiet, fast, powerful and not very expensive. With some future-proofing in the SDHD, shoots AAs and has the 6x zoom and IS. Plus basically good image quality especially ISO80-400. It is faster at the same ISO than my s2 (and half as fast at the same ISO as my a610) but in playing around with slow handheld shooting I discovered that I can get good shots out of the s2 at 1s exposures, but only 1-4s to 1-8s min with the a710. The a610 pretty-much needs 1-15s and up. Of course you can get a decent shot that looks ok on the camera LCD at under 1-10s with the a610, but looking at it on the computer monitor reveals obvious handshake. Likewise 1sec exposures with the a710 look ok on the camera but they are not stable. To play this game you have to know the limits of your camera and also get familiar with the custom timer.
Reply by member: touristguy87
Mar 6, 2007 ps pricegrabber is amazing...I didn't know that Nikon makes a Coolpix S2...of course it is a slim-profile shirt-pocket camera...it has to have completely-different performance characteristics. But I wonder how many owners complain that the image quality isn't good enough, and go out and buy an Canon s2?
Reply by member: touristguy87
Mar 6, 2007 ...I don't think it's a question. Do you see the blotches and distortions in the s2 shots? Under zoom, in natural mode, the FZ5 is better. More accurate, less NR...cleaner lines...even with the sharpness down on the s2. It's still oversharpened, probably to make up for the extra NR.
Reply by member: touristguy87
Mar 17, 2007 regarding the replies #59-62 and so forth, the "brain teasers" were too hard. To clarify: the s2 shots are the ones that are kinda light and fluffy with a little distortion in the lines and patchiness in the colors. With noticable NR smoothing. Generally washed-out colors. I shot it with the contrast and the saturation both down a notch. The fz5 shot in standard mode was much harder, with more contrast and saturation, and more distorted. The fz5 shot in natural mode was not quite so hard, had almost no linear distortion but still a touch of NR softness. And was in general a lot softer than the others, because in natural mode both the saturation and the contrast are minimizaed. The sp500 shot was in the middle and the raw sp500 shot had almost no NR softening, almost no linear distortion (like the fz5 in standard mode), they have some color grain, but they have a whole lot of detail that the NR usually takes out.
Reply by member: touristguy87
Mar 17, 2007 I SHOT IT WITH THE CONTRAST AND SHARPNESS DOWN A NOTCH. Not the saturation.
Reply by member: touristguy87
Mar 17, 2007 Even then the sharpness is too high.
Reply by member: touristguy87
Mar 29, 2007 even if you do have to manually set up the autobracketing each time on the FZ5, this is offset by the fact that it is easier to change the exposure than with the s2. Just the touch of a button does it, with the s2 you have to pull up the function menu then find the exposure entry to change it. There is no dedicated button for this like on the A series Canons. Even so the s2 is pull it out, turn it on, and shoot. The autobracketing is a setup entry, it stays the same through power cycles, and the turn on and lens-extension speeds are much faster than the FZ5. Plus the buttons are better-placed (they fixed this in the FZ7) This gives the s2 a light-footedness and ease of use that is hidden by its size and weight, like Clark Kent hides Superman. Still he needs that phone booth. The S2 is still big and heavy, and its lens cap does have a mind of its own. But...what they both need, really, is a 28-320mm zoom, not a 35-420mm zoom. There simply is hardly any need for a 12x zoom on a 35mm camera, and a lot of times I am walking around with these cameras and simply pining for a 28mm lens. With a 35mm lens, you really can only shoot half, maybe a third, of the normal human FOV. That means that I see a shot, and I have to either walk back another 20yards or more, or I have to not zoom in so that I can get the whole shot. It's easy to have to compromise between getting good detail and getting a large enough FOV. Very easy to overzoom with these cameras, not to mention the 4:3 without a 16:9 or even a 3:2 mode. But, I mean, this is really splitting ant-hairs. Still, if you want a shot and the reason you have a camera is to take shots of scenes that you want to preserve, why would you want a camera that doesn't see things the same way that you do? The camera should at least *start* with around 80% of the normal human FOV then zoom in from there. And frankly I'm tired of shooting 4:3. It just doesn't look natural, there is either too much sky and foreground and the image detail is too small, or there is no FOV. It only works well under high zoom or with a large DOF shot, or, I have to shoot wide and at high res all the time, then crop later. The trend then is to shoot 10MP superfine 35mm all the time just to get the FOV then go in and cut out the sky and foreground and part of the FOV, to make a 16:9 shot at 2MP. No wonder in-camera cropping is such a big deal nowadays. The thing I have to say about the FZ7 and the S3 is that they have more of the features that I want in the FZ5 and S2, but I hate the viewfinder location in the FZ7 (plus it has even more noise and NR than the FZ5) and the S3 just isn't that much better than the s2 that I'd want to buy an S3, plus it has more chroma noise and the ISO speeds are overrated. The problem is that the sensors aren't getting any better, in terms of signal to noise, they're just getting more pixels. But the image quality itself is decreasing. It's like the difference between Britney Spears at 16 with no kids and a first recording contract, and Britney Spears at 25 with two kids and millions in the bank. Neither one is what you want and the second is hardly going to make you happy, even if it has some good features. I want Britney at 30 with no kids and the millions in the bank :)
Reply by member: touristguy87
Jun 6, 2007 Some night shooting I've done with it lately...it can definitely take some good handheld night shots, at ISO200 or even 100 if you're good with the custom timer. The shot is not entirely stable but good enough for 2MP viewing. I don't shoot this camera much, anymore, especially since I got my A610. I mean, you can't use the 12x zoom after it gets so dark, especially handheld, and the A610 has more fine detail and is a much better wide-angle camera. Dragging this sucker out of the house and dealing with the size and lens cap just doesn't appeal to me, any more. But, I mean, this shot is screaming for a DSLR. Shooting at dusk is a job for a real camera, not an etch-a-sketch on steroids. But you're not going to take this with an A610 handheld. The point is, though, if you have a tripod, the A610 is just fine for this. The point is, trying to shoot handheld at night without a tripod will cost you a lot of money. This is 1-5th sec ISO200 -1.3EV
Reply by member: touristguy87
Jun 22, 2007 handheld night shot ISO400, 1-2 sec exposure, -2.0EV.
Reply by member: touristguy87
Jun 22, 2007 I mean, shoot that shot with a tripod and you'll be fine.
Reply by member: touristguy87
Jun 22, 2007 It seems that this camera reaches a point of maximum instability around 1-2 sec and then from there down to 1 s actually gets *more* stable. I get a lot of 1s shots with this camera that come out great, all things considered. It rewards your willingness to be patient, take chances and try a range of different ISO-exposure combinations.
Reply by member: touristguy87
Jun 25, 2007 Here's a shot made much easier by the s2's flip LCD but still even at ISO50 1-1000s f5 you can see that it isn't all that great. Not really the sort of shot that you would want to shoot with an s2 or a midbody, in general, instead of with a DSLR. Grainy and low-resolution even at ISO50. It's a very useable camera, easy to use, provides a lot of support, but it doesn't take great photos. Just decent ones. The farther away you get from your subject, the easier it is to see this. Even worse I had to downsample this to fit it on pricegrabber, so there's additional graininess from that. But this is the sort of shooting that I do. It's much better for close-up work in good light. But any camera can do that well.
Reply by member: touristguy87
Jun 25, 2007 the thing is, normally, overexposing is what you want to do, to reduce noise at night (increase the signal to noise ratio) but this thing has so much noise at high ISO that it therefore requires dramatic overexposure to mask the noise...to levels that ruin the shot. At any exposure that you would want to use, at ISO400, the noise will dominate the shot. With my FZ5 this is not a problem...with my new Rebel XTi, it is not even an issue. Plus the FZ5 has a much better lens than the s2, and a lot less sharpening (which distorts fine detail especially at high zoom). Still the s2 has very nice color (while the FZ5 requires a bit of salt and sharpening to enjoy the images) and a flip LCD and keeps the AEB settings through a power cycle, and, at ISO50, ignoring the lens cap, it is quite decent. It's not a bad camera to have. But it is not a great camera. Physically it is almost everything that you want. The image quality cannot match what you hold in your hands. It will tease you relentlessly until you buy a DSLR. I've had this camera for 18 months, bought 4 other cameras that are all smaller and at least as good, and still, wanting desperately to get rid of noise and image grain at any ISO over 100, just now plunked down $800 for a Rebel XTi. With 5 other cameras on my shelf, all much smaller than the Rebel and many with a much longer zoom...today, I decided to keep the Rebel. It is just too clean and too easy to use and shoot, and the color is too nice, to take it back. Plus I like the wide-angle kit lens. Enough said.
Reply by member: touristguy87
Jun 25, 2007 having said that, Neat Image does a decent job with the ISO400 files, given a S2 profile, but still the fine detail takes a hit.
Reply by member: touristguy87
Jun 25, 2007 yes, so if there isn't a lot of fine detail in the original shot, and you shoot ISO400, it can save the shot, but if there is a lot of fine detail, using NI will just blur the shot. The more fine detail in the shot, the less that you will like the results of using a noise-reduction program on it. And this camera is far and away the most noisy at ISO400, compared to my FZ5 and SP500. They look virtually noise-free compared to it, as long as they are shot near EV0. So it's a double problem...you want to lower the EV to gain speed, and use a higher ISO to gain speed, but using the higher ISO costs you both noise and resolution (because the camera is going to clean up the shot regardless) and the lower EV reduces the signal to noise ratio. With this camera you can only use that technique effectively when there is very little light, for real, and no overcast or clouds to highlight the noise.
Reply by member: touristguy87
Jun 26, 2007 Taking the s2 from wide to zoom, ISO50, low-sharpening mode.
Reply by member: touristguy87
Jun 27, 2007 ISO50 tripod shot at the Baltimore Inner Harbor...it does have a neat feature where it will show you the blown highlights, on the LCD, on playback. This is a 5MP shot cropped to 2MP and then downsampled to 640x480. The very same shot taken with the same camera during the day? Half the fine detail is obliterated by noise and NR even at ISO50. Forget about underexposing it even to -0.7EV. The smaller the feature size, the less this camera can handle the shot, it just gets to the point where it will drive you nuts because it is good for medium-range and close-in work but it simply sucks for long-range wide-angle shooting. Unless of course you are shooting at night and then all you really care about are the pretty colors in the shot. Then it's just fine. Don't even ask what this looked like shooting in twilight at ISO200, just imagine brown salt sprinkled all over the shot. Sure, you can Neat-Image it...you can scrub any shot from any camera...but when the fine detail that you want to see is of the same size as the noise, you just eliminate the fine-detail trying to remove the noise.
Reply by member: touristguy87
Jun 29, 2007 There is really no way that you can effectively remove noise from this camera at ISO400 and still get a quality shot with a decent level of fine detail, unless the subject is very close to the camera and the exposure is close to 0EV, and your idea of "a quality shot" is 4x6 or smaller. It's much easier starting from ISO200...at ISO400 you will be lucky to correct to the noise levels of ISO200 and not have a smeared shot. An S2 at ISO400 and Neat Image is not the solution.
Reply by member: touristguy87
Jun 29, 2007 On the other hand, speaking as an S2 owner and someone who has actually bought a Rebel XTi afterwards, if you really want to impress yourself with your frugality and "wisdom", especially if you tend to shoot everything in sight like I do, simply use this as a "limit"...don't shoot the S2 at ISO400, ever (there literally is no point in that, for mid to long-range shots) and if you like your ISO200 shots, fine. If you don't like them, toss them, and just keep telling yourself that a Rebel is too expensive to buy, too big to carry around, and won't have the same zoom range anyway. Which is basically true. Then carry a mini-tripod around and stay away from anyone with a DSLR. That's what I did for a good year, it worked for me until one day I got caught with too litle light, too small a tripod, no good place to rest my mini-tripod to get the shot that I wanted, too much s2 noise even at ISO200, and just too much that I wanted to shoot, while all around me were, you guessed it, people with DSLRs. But honestly a Rebel alone is not going to decisively beat the S2 and a tripod. You're going to have to get a stabilized lens, for that. A reasonably fast, stabilized lens. So you're talking $700 for the Rebel XTi and another $500 for a decent IS lens. There's no way around it. Big tripods are too much of a pain in the butt to carry around, and small tripods require a lot of compromise in terms of shot position. It pretty much reduces to an A610 and a mini-tripod vs the s2 and a mini-tripod vs the Rebel with an IS lens and a mini-tripod. $200 vs $300 vs $1300, three different levels of size, performance and flexibility. The A610 has the lead on size, the s2 on zoom and value (to be honest, the Rebel without a lens is not worth 3x as much as the s2 with a 36-420mm effective, but the s2 is worth a hell of a lot more than twice the cost of an A610, given the lens), and the Rebel has the lead on outright performance, especially if you don't mind changing lenses now and then, because you can keep buying lenses as long as you have money to buy lenses with. With the S2 all you can do is go out and buy that super ultra-light mega-stiff $1300 carbon-fiber tripod that you've been wanting for 5 years now, but couldn't justify. You can tell your wife that buying it will save you $5k in lenses :)...but with the Rebel, you can buy a couple of lenses maybe an IS lens and a cheap zoom, or a cheap zoom with IS, and a decent tripod from Best Buy, and be happy, as long as you don't mind dropping $2k on it and the lenses, and then a bag to carry it all around. In that context, the A610 is just a fashion accessory. When you cannot carry the Rebel, the a610 will make perfect sense, but still, even then, for $250 more, how can you not buy an S2. It's just too useful. Yes, I know, it sucks as a mid-zoom camera, it sucks even at ISO200, but how else can you get a usable pocket-sized 420mm IS at ISO50 for $250? You just can't, short of an FZ5. One of those two combined with an A610 and a Rebel with an IS lens makes total sense. The best p&s, the best midrange, the best DSLR (in terms of low noise, which for me is the only reason to get a DSLR, and also in terms of value). A good range to have. You can even carry the s2 and the Rebel at the same time, and not feel stupid, as the s2s' main utility then is as a small, cheap, long, IS F4.8 zoom. Or, ok, go ahead and buy and carry a 300mm F4.8 EF-S zoom and see how smart you feel then. I like the s2, except for the fact that half of the images from it suck. The half that don't suck look pretty good, and make me feel good about owning it and carrying it. I guess that it is like a good divorce settlement. There's a lot that I don't like about it, there's a lot that could be better, but it's reasonable to deal with, easy enough to afford and carry around, quite powerful given its size, and in most cases it can get the job done fairly well. As long as you don't look at the shots too closely. You can think of the Canon S2-IS as a mini-DSLR...with performance and image quality that is proportionate with its size relative to a Rebel with a 24-300mm F2.8-4.6 IS zoom lens. That would be a bigger, heavier lens than this, this is actually the 7" long 3.5 pound 28-300mm F3.5-5.6 IS USM lens...and about twice as expensive as this lens...which is a $2300 lens. Or you can get a Rebel and a $600 24-250mm F3.6 IS lens (not made by Canon) that is only 3" long. The S2 does not have even half the performance of the Rebel with either lens...it is 4x as noisy as the Rebel XTi, 4x as slow, with half the image resolution. It is also a third of the price and half the size of the Rebel with the kit lens. But you could buy a decent car for what it would cost you to get the same zoom range at F4.6, with a Rebel. There is no way that you can really equate the two, other than they both take photographs.
Reply by member: touristguy87
Jun 29, 2007 ...it's one of those things where you start out trying to figure out which one is "better" and then realize that they just can't be compared directly. You can't really compare a Bentley to a Toyota Camry, a Porsche 930 to an Alfa Romeo, a 4-engined speedboat to a 2-person sailboat. An F-16 to a Cessna 180. They're just too different, their capabilities, their costs, their market, the image they project...just too different. The only thing that the Rebel and the S2 have in common is that you can use them to take photographs.
Reply by member: touristguy87
Jun 29, 2007 ...it's one of those things where you start out trying to figure out which one is "better" and then realize that they just can't be compared directly. You can't really compare a Bentley to a Toyota Camry, a Porsche 930 to an Alfa Romeo, a 4-engined speedboat to a 2-person sailboat. An F-16 to a Cessna 180. They're just too different, their capabilities, their costs, their market, the image they project...just too different. The only thing that the Rebel and the S2 have in common is that you can use them to take photographs.
Reply by member: touristguy87
Jun 29, 2007 well, sometimes you *can* compare an F-16 to a Cessna 180.
Reply by member: touristguy87
Jul 8, 2007 ok, this is the reason why this S2 is going back onto the eBay from whence it came, this very night...I took these out at the Jersey shore this weekend, very sunny day, a little hazy...but I said, "well, if I keep this Rebel XTi then I will also keep the s2 so that I can have a nice zoom lens with good color, plus all the other features of the s2 that the Rebel doesn't have, without spending another $500+ for a long lens". Well, that did not really work out, here. This is one of the better shots that I took, and in fact I did not want to pull the batteries out of my S2 and put them in my A610, for shots just like this...long-range shots over a wide area, you can't really do that well with a wide-angle lens. You don't really see anything until you shoot at least 100mm effective, certainly not what you see with your eye. You either get the FOV or the feature size, but not both, and to get feature size with a camera you have to shoot fairly tight. This was a shot from the s2 at full zoom, 420mm effective, and I have cropped it in two places to show the problem with the s2. Which is, namely, a lot of optical distortion at high zoom, coupled with a fair amount of noise even at IS050. The distortion comes from simply having too much sharpening. You would think that it would be simple to back off the sharpening at high zoom factors, wouldn't you? But, no. And this was shot in low sharpening mode. And, like I said, this is one of the better ones. Most of them came out with a lot more distortion than this. Anyway, between this and the lens cap, even given the shooting-speed and features of the S2, it simply is not really worth the size and weight. For what I need it for, my FZ5 is a much better camera. And the Rebel simply beats the pants off of it. I just got a nice big, fat 17-85mm F4.0 IS USM lens for it, and now it too can shoot out to 1s exposures handheld...with a decent zoom. The S2 has certainly gotten me a lot of good shots, but I have no further tolerance for its optical distortion. Either due to noise, NR or oversharpening. I have made the jump to better cameras and I am not willing to go back.
Reply by member: touristguy87
Jul 9, 2007 So you won't think that I'm just a whiner...here are some of the bad crops...I mean, good Lord...I didn't think that this camera had *that* much distortion at high zoom, but the problem is that when your lens still isn't really long enough, and the feature size is still kinda small, every bit of distortion is magnified. I mean, I will never take this camera out for this type of shooting again, and hopefully I will sell it soon. Which is a shame, as it really is useful for medium to short-range work. This camera with a much better 6x zoom lens and a lot less sharpening (or zoom-dependent sharpening) would be killer. The 12x allows you to see way too many of the deficiencies of the camera. Unless, of course, you are Canon, and you want to sell a lot of expensive DSLRs and lenses. I had the same sort of problem with a Nikon S4 and its 10x zoom...an A700 and its 6x zoom...a TZ1 and its 10x zoom. You really need a good sensor and a good IP engine, to take good shots with those cheap long zooms. The lenses just aren't good enough for it. Anyway, so this camera is done, though I must admit that just last week I got a shot that I had been trying hard to get for a long time, because of the flip LCD, although I could have gotten it with my A610 too, but my A610 just died on me (it must have been pissed that I didn't even shoot it when I was at the Jersey shore this weekend). But this camera is done. I would never have though that it would do this badly on these shots. Boy, did it suck.
Reply by member: touristguy87
Jul 9, 2007 I mean, all that sharpening not only distorts the image at high zoom, it makes the image even more noisy and kicks up the size of the noise grain. This camera is a decent camera, but *only* if you shoot tight on your subject. The farther away you get and the more FOV in your shot, the more it sucks. And that is at IS050. ISO100-400 are proportionally worse. But, still. I am talking about "sucking" relative to a good DSLR. It smokes a TZ1 or S4. It will even make an A700/A710 look bad at high zoom. The only midrange that can really compete with it and do better is an FZ5, and then only at mid to high zoom. The SP500 has the same oversharpening problem, coupled with an average lens, but, mercifully, a lot less noise. As well as less speed and no NR. You can keep on shooting with the s2 long after you have to hang it up with an SP500 or even an FZ5. They are good cameras, but clearly Canon has tweaked the ISO rating on the S2. And at "ISO200" and "ISO400" you pay the price for it. Very fast, but very noisy too. Ironically the FZ5 is slower at ISO200 but a lot less noisy and even ISO400 is useful for low-light shooting. If it didn't have a goofy color cast in low light, I would sell the s2 without a second thought. As it is I am selling it with mild regret. But enough playing around with this thing, I have had a love-hate relationship with it for a year. Enough already. It is just *such* a tease. It let me down too many times, too often in too many ways, with the occasional great shot that kept me coming back for more. I ended-up buying a Rebel XTi and a 17-85 F4 IS lens that cost 5x as much, just to be free of it.
Reply by member: touristguy87
Jul 9, 2007 I look back through these 80 replies of mine, and I see some very good looking shots. Some of them, though, look great because they are downsampled to 640x480. Some of them look great because the color is so nice in this camera. Not too blue, not too brown, not too flat, not too contrasty. Very natural colors, with a little reddish tint. Owning a $700 Rebel XTi and a $500 IS lens with a quarter of the range of the S2s' lens, I can say that for $350 this camera is a good deal. You just have to be prepared to be utterly disgusted with some of the shots from it. Some you will love, and some...are just a mess. It's like buying cheap wine or dating cheerleaders. If you don't care too much and you enjoy saving money, this is the camera for you. If you *do* care a lot, and you want to save money but still get a powerhouse of a midrange camera, get an FZ5. Trust me. Don't even waste your time with an S2 or anything else. Get an FZ5, get used to it, bond with it, exchange blood vows with it, shoot it in natural mode, get a good post-processing program, learn how to sharpen well, learn to auto exposure-bracket, learn how, when and why to adjust the exposure and levels and contrast in post-processing, get a nice little mini-tripod, and enjoy your FZ5. Don't even think about getting an S2, or S3 or S5. No matter how much you think the FZ5 sucks, it is still better than an S2. Trust me. The S2 is for people who want a camera that will take shots that look good when viewed from large distances (where you cannot see what it has done to the fine detail, where you can't really see all the noise), and who don't want to spend a lot of money for a big zoom and IS.
Reply by member: touristguy87
Jul 18, 2007 I successfully sold my s2 on eBay for $170! whoo-hooo!
Reply by member: touristguy87
Jul 26, 2007 one of the last series of shots that I took with my s2...trust me, there were a *lot* of posts and lightpoles in this shot, but with a few hours worth of postprocessing, I got a presentable result.
Reply by member: touristguy87
Jul 26, 2007 (sorry, one of those was a 2MP file the other a 640x480 and I put them both up, didn't I..."d'oh" :)
By member:
umdengineer
- May 27, 2006
Excellent Camera!Strengths: Very good movie mode; as good as a camcorder Zoom works very well Good image stabilization Weakness: Sometimes has focusing problems in low light Oversoftens images on lower picture quality settings This is probably one the most versatile rangefinder cameras out there (with the exception of the newer S3). The camera can do just about anything and gives the user plenty of flexibility.
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By member:
lindamartinseng
- Apr 20, 2006
A great camera, but lacks an important featureStrengths: Fabulous zoom, easy to use features Weakness: NO SPORTS SETTING for faster action shots! :( I love this camera, except I can't take great pictures of the kids playing hockey, figure skating or diving, because there is no "running man" symbol for easy access to faster speeds, and the fastest manual setting is 400 speed. That was a big disappointment when I finally realized it was lacking that feature. Now I have to have two cameras-one for sports photos, and this one for everything else. Did you find it helpful or unhelpful? Top
By member:
posttogoogle
- Mar 20, 2006
Canon S2 ISStrengths: Zoom. Shooting speed. Picture quality. Movie quality. Wide range for features and settings. Weakness: Lens cap is cheap. Manual doesn't explain settings well enough for non-pro users. Takes great pictures. Great movie clips. Zoom works great. You get lots of camera for the money. Now is the time to buy as the price has dropped since the S3 came out. The S3 is not enough of an upgrade to buy instead IMHO. 88% of readers found this review helpful. Did you find it helpful or unhelpful? Top
By member:
Fallin63
- Mar 18, 2006
Canon PowerShot S2 IS 5 Megapixel Compact Camera -...Strengths: 12x zoom! Ease of use - QUALITY of PICS Weakness: just a little uncomfortable to hold until you get used to the shape I'm quitting my job! and becoming a professional photographer - Canon makes it possible! Just received my Canon Powershot and I'm amazed at how remarkable this camera performs. I have very little experience with cameras - and absoultey none with digitals - but the Canon makes me look like a pro! My very first pic - a Bird of Paradise in the setting sun in my front yard is one of the most detailed pics I have ever seen! 93% of readers found this review helpful. Did you find it helpful or unhelpful? Top
By member:
HOPPY305
- Mar 13, 2006
CANON S2Strengths: THIS CAMERA TAKES LONG DISTANCE PICTURE Weakness: I WISH THE FLASH WAS BETTER I HAVE HAD THIS CAMERA SINCE JULY OF 2005. THIS IS MY FIRST DIGTAL CAMERA. I HAVE 3 35 MM 2 OF WHICH ARE SLR'S. IT HAS THE BEST OPTICAL ZOOM FOR WHAT I PAID. I USED THE VIEW FINDER ALL OF THE TIME. SAVES ON THE BATTERY. I HAVE ALSO GOTTEN RECHARGEABLE BATTERIES FOR THIS CAMERA. THIS IS A GREAT CAMERA FOR THE FIRST CAMERA OR SOME ONE THAT IS ADVANCE IN PHOTOGRAPHY. 83% of readers found this review helpful. Did you find it helpful or unhelpful? Top
Reply by member: wbailey3
Sep 13, 2006 Please do not type in all caps. It makes things very hard to read and looks like you are shouting.
By member:
szhang101
- Feb 15, 2006
I love this camera. Period.Strengths: Great picture quality! Lots of options! Weakness: Lens cover comes off unwanted The lens cover is very flimsy. I guess there is a reason for this: when you turn on the camera for shooting, the lens comes out. In order not to damage the mechanism, the cover has to come off easily if you forget to take the lens off first (as I often do). A better design would help to keep the cover on to protect the lens when you don't use it. 87% of readers found this review helpful. Did you find it helpful or unhelpful? Top
By member:
vidhyavidhya
- Feb 8, 2006
goodStrengths: high resolution Weakness: costlier high resolution camera. But it costs more. It will be better if the cost is reduced. Overall performance will be nice in this camera. Also, the camera appearance is professional. 17% of readers found this review helpful. Did you find it helpful or unhelpful? Top
By member:
Webtools
- Feb 7, 2006
Great Camera in this price range, great output...Strengths: Super long 48x Combined Zoom. Weakness: Lens Cap is Crap! Flash is "manually control". Even in 12x the image is sharp, but sometimes the purple edge shown. Video quality is just like DV, unbelievable. 67% of readers found this review helpful. Did you find it helpful or unhelpful? Top
By member:
jjgrogansr
- Jan 16, 2006
PowerShot S2 IS as an action shot cameraStrengths: Action shooting using manual setting; Image Stabilization while tracking moving subjects; Light balance features Weakness: Autofocus sometimes difficult when zoomed in on a subject, due to interference from other action in front of the camera, but not within the zoom area. The S2 IS offers strong capabilities in a compact package. I have extensive experience with SLR film cameras for action shooting at sporting events, and was looking for a moderately priced digital camera that could allow more control than your typical "point-and-shoot." Did you find it helpful or unhelpful? Top
Reply by member: cblong
Jan 23, 2006 Hi, I have had this camera since Xmas and I am still learning how to use it. Love it so far. However, I haven't had much luck with getting my daughter's basketball pictures to turn out good. I see the settings you mention using and that is great. But can I save those settings once I make them for future use?
Reply by member: jiver
Feb 22, 2006 I have had this unit for nearly 3 months and could not be more disappointed in a leading name mfr.
Reply by member: ak1972
Feb 24, 2006 Action shot cameras are just about the hardest shots for a non-pro because of the lighting and high speed action.
Reply by member: sammifromiami
Apr 22, 2006 I've been looking for digital cameras that will take good quality action shots for my lacrosse, tennis and surf teams. The first person seemed to really like it for its action shots, everyone else is saying its not so good. Would you reccomend this camera for sport photos?
Reply by member: soundbyer
May 12, 2006 Action shooting can be difficult but comes down to max-ing your shutter speed ....
By member:
barry1170
- Dec 30, 2005
Great camera!Strengths: Best video for a digital still camera. 12x zoom. Ability to accept filters and additional lenses with adapter. Battery life with AA rechargeable batteries. Quick recovery between shots. Weakness: Too many bottons on the back make it easy to push one accidentally. Slow to focus at times. Noise at higher ISO above 200. This is my third digital camera as I move up and the technology improves and is by far the best. I chose this camera because it does everything that I want a digital camera to do and it does it exceptionally. Choice of 4 movie modes, including 640x480 (same as regular video cameras) and can take stills and zoom during video mode. I haven't seen another digital still camera that can do that! The stabilizer is a great help for shakey hands, too! I bought a lens adapter and keep a UV filter on at all times to protect the lens and it came with a very nice lens cap that stays on tightly. 12x zoom really brings things up close. The macro is about the best that I have ever used. I also like the custom setting mode so that I can store the camera settings that I use the most. This camera can be a "point and shoot" camera or set up to be fully manual for the more advanced user. It is heavier than my wife's Panasonic FZ5, but personally I like the heft. It doesn't feel like a toy. Drawback: it has too many bottons on the back that are easily pushed by accident and can be a bit of a pain when you are trying to get a quick picture. All in all, this is a great camera. I was going to buy an SLR, but this camera does it all and more than an SLR, so why pay substantially more for extra lenses and besides, an SLR doesn't have some of the features that this camera has! 83% of readers found this review helpful. Did you find it helpful or unhelpful? Top
Reply by member: groucho121
Jan 1, 2006 If anyone would be so kind who owns one of these: Does the auto focus in "auto mode" work similar to the A600 & A500 models,where you depress the shutter 1/2 way and it auto focuses?
By member:
imchip
- Dec 21, 2005
Keep LookingStrengths: Lens is super, heavy duty camera body. Weakness: Photo quality is very poor. Color saturation is weak, red eye is a real problem. Flash pictures at a distance are not lit sufficiently by the flash. I've been "in the market" for a digital camera for years, so I was very disheartened to experience the inferior results from this camera. This is especially true after reading the "glorious" testimonials here. Perhaps I just was unlucky to buy the "lemon," but I returned the camera within a week. The comparable Sony Cybershot will be my next trial. 10% of readers found this review helpful. Did you find it helpful or unhelpful? Top
By member:
kmelmore
- Dec 16, 2005
A wonderful camera! Worth every pennyStrengths: Easy to handle. Picture detail is unbelievable. Menus/functions not difficult with a little practice. LCD can be rotated which protects it when not in use. Weakness: Not many - Like others have said-I guess the lens cap isn't that great. It could be a little more secure. I bought this camera for just over $400 so I expected it to be really good. It's far exceeding those expectations. I had some of my shots printed finally and WOW - they really turned out cyrstal clear and detailed. The first night I got it (my first digital camera) I spent about 3 hours going through the manual and setting it up and taking test pictures. Once I practiced for a minute with the menus and functions I didn't find it difficult. Although at first I was a little intimidated. 82% of readers found this review helpful. Did you find it helpful or unhelpful? Top
By member:
NRJYZD1
- Dec 14, 2005
EXCELLENT ProductStrengths: Ease of use and Picture Quality. Excellent battery life Weakness: Needs to incorporate an automatic flash feature to rasie the flash when a flash is needed Very easy camera to use. Takes phenominal pictures. Takes an average person and makes them a very good photographer. Everthing you need to have is right at your fingertips. The display is a little small but that is nmot why you buy this camers. 92% of readers found this review helpful. Did you find it helpful or unhelpful? Top
By member:
a6101a
- Dec 13, 2005
Good Camera, poor auto focus, Fix for lens capStrengths: 12X zoom (almost too much) would now consider 8X. Image stabilizer great. Great movies. Good flash no hot spots. Lots of exposure settings. Easy to use menu’s. Weakness: Soft ware pretty much useless except for the movie editor can mix stills and video into a slide show. AF assist beam only good about 15 feet. Indoors pictures in dim light (auditoriums) cannot focus, I read every review I could find before I bough this camera. I wish I knew about the auto focus problem. Can use if you are patient. Still a good camera. Recommend buying a good editor you will need one, exposure and color incorrect numerous times. Batteries get rechargeable recommend Everyready 2500’s they’re great. The LaCross 900 recharger is also great. I bought 2 1gig cards one would probably have been enough. You also have to sharpen the images for numbers, road signs, ect. Might consider looking 14% of readers found this review helpful. Did you find it helpful or unhelpful? Top
By member:
synthboy88
- Dec 6, 2005
Great Camera for the price...Strengths: Everything Weakness: The typical lens cap and some zooming difficulty What can I say that hasn't been said before? Well, it's a great camera for nighttime or pitch black conditions with the flash... fun. Best bang for the buck! 83% of readers found this review helpful. Did you find it helpful or unhelpful? Top
By member:
apollo79
- Dec 2, 2005
review for canon s2 ISStrengths: great camera!! high resolution, high optical zoom, very profession Weakness: no I love this small stuff very much. It has high resolution (5mp), a super big optical zoom (12X) and it has special Image stablize function which can let your picture looks great even with 12X big optical zoom. It worths 400 dollars!! 83% of readers found this review helpful. Did you find it helpful or unhelpful? Top
By member:
Erichards
- Nov 28, 2005
Canon S2 ISStrengths: Great grip, feels great and is easy to use, perfect size. Weakness: Lens cap keeps falling off. Should come with Lithium batteries and charger Very satisfied, and I researched Digital cameras for some time before purchasing this last week. I am surprised that Canon overlooked a small detail like the lens cap, however, as annoying as it is, it is not a big deal as the quality of the functionalality aspects of the camera certainly outweights this defect. Did you find it helpful or unhelpful? Top
By member:
Den_Man
- Nov 2, 2005
Impressive Camera!Strengths: 12x Optical zoom, amazingly fast start-up time, image quality. Weakness: Loose lens cap, SD memory. The Canon S2IS is truly an amazing camera and it's been well worth the wait for all these features. My previous digital camera was a 4MP Canon G2 and although it was a decent camera, the S2IS is an order of magnitude faster and has an extra megapixel to boot. 83% of readers found this review helpful. Did you find it helpful or unhelpful? Top
By member:
ATC20
- Oct 31, 2005
Canon S2 ISStrengths: Solid feel, fast response, beautiful pictures. Weakness: Poor lens cover, a camera this good should have one that stays on. I purchased this camera as an upgrade from a canon A75 and now use it almost exclusively. The optics are great. It takes wonderful pictures for a point and shoot. Additionally it has very little lag from when you push the button to when it actually takes the picture under good lighting. I don't think you will be disappointed with this camera. One thing that I really hate though is the fact that the lens cover constantly falls off. It really needs a lens cap that clicks on. Other than that, this is a quality camera. Did you find it helpful or unhelpful? Top
By member:
mrrizvi_pg
- Oct 31, 2005
Excellent CameraStrengths: Excellent camera, rich in options, great zoom, fast focus and capture. Weakness: Lens cap, need good quality batteries(2100 mAh or more). I have been using Canon S410 for more than one year, and hence bought Canon S2IS without hesitation. Canon S2IS is as great as I expected from a Canon product. 92% of readers found this review helpful. Did you find it helpful or unhelpful? Top
By member:
dingdang
- Oct 28, 2005
Great cameraStrengths: Excellent pictures with super nice colors. Movie mode is nice. Weakness: None so far. I had own several digital cameras. From Kodak, Nikon, Olympus, and Canon. I owned Canon S40, S45, S1 IS, G6, and currently S2. First of all, let me tell you. The absolutely best pictures are only made by Canon. And among Canons that I owned S2 IS is absolutely winner. It takes crisp photos at any light conditions. The 12x optical zoom is unbelivable and IS is must have. So far, I shoot about 200 pictures of moving cars, people, animals and NONE of them are blured. Prior to purchasing this camera, I was concern if 1.8" screen will be enough as I was spoiled by Canon's G6 2.0" screen and Kodak's V550 2.5". I can tell you now that with optical viewfinder that is installed of S2, I am not using screen at all while shooting pictures. The lense cap is something that might be better but as much as I got used to G6 identical one, I am not seeing it as a problem. Now comparing G6 to S2, I am in most occurance prefer latest one as DIGIC II processor is absolutely awesome. It is fast and acurate. And one more thing, S2 makes awesome stereo movies with a lenght of almost 20 min (1G), not like my old G6 that is restricting me to 3 min mono sound movies. So unless you need to print large prints (like I do) of 20"x30", S2 is the best Canon camera on today's market. 94% of readers found this review helpful. Did you find it helpful or unhelpful? Top
Reply by member: albertoescallon
Jan 29, 2006 Comparing it with the Sony DSC H1, would you go for Canon?
By member:
yisherry
- Oct 27, 2005
Canson S2 ISStrengths: easy to use, excellent picture. I used this camera almost two month. This is my first digital camera, and I'm really like it. I like its function key setting and it's really convenient. I took more than 500 pictures and got few blurred pictures. the focus is not super quick, but fast enough for me. I also has the loose cap problem like most pepole mentioned, but I can deal with it. Overall, this is a excellent ultra zoom camera, I'm really happy with my purchase. 80% of readers found this review helpful. Did you find it helpful or unhelpful? Top
Reply by member: cede
Jan 30, 2007 Here is a permanent cure to your loose cap: Tape a .5 inch by .25 inch black tape on the inner lip of the cap. Trim off any tape over lapping lip. It will never drop off. In fact, you are more apt to forget to take the cap off when you switch the camera on at which point you will wonder why the camera does not turn on until you realize you still have the cap on.
By member:
tonyeagle
- Sep 12, 2005
Excellant Camera Alsome ZoomStrengths: Excellent camera. would advise spending the little nessicary extra to have this one. works well ,and the zoom is absolutely awalsome, good size little larger but worth the weight for the options Weakness: focusing seems to be a little lacking at first, suject of the picture will attempt to focus all of the picture, but Im still learning to use it Excellent camera. would advise spending the little necessary extra to have this one. works well ,and the zoom is absolutely awesome, good size little larger but worth the weight for the options the ultimate SD memory is highly recommended it will make a big difference in the response time to save picture 79% of readers found this review helpful. Did you find it helpful or unhelpful? Top
By member:
AlzaCorp
- Aug 30, 2005
Canon PowerShot S2 IS Digital CameraStrengths: Excellent balance of feature set, execution, and price. Fast on time, focust time, sequential picture mode. Sharp capable optics with 12x optical zoom. Excellent movie mode. Decent price at $500. Weakness: Picture slightly oversharpened. Noise at ISO 200. Some autofocus/autoexposure difficulties. No wireless remote. 1GB movie size limit. No Hot Shoe. No lens filter to protect lens. Have taken about 6.5GB worth of pictures and movies with this camera. I am not needing to use my movie camera anymore (have not had to in my last 2 weekend trips). 93% of readers found this review helpful. Did you find it helpful or unhelpful? Top
Reply by member: Aviator19680
Sep 11, 2005 My dealings with my Canon Powershot is outstanding. On our recent trip we took over 800 pictures and was able to "voice print" all of these. This the best feature to remind us where it was taken, what it's all about and any other identification a person might need. We absolutly love this camera. We plan on purchasing the wide-angle and telephoto lens that can be used with this camera. Again a beautiful camera.
By member:
oh_maan
- Aug 30, 2005
awesome cameraStrengths: 12x zoom, IS, manual mode, colour accent, very low noise even with digital zoom on and every other feature it comes with Weakness: lens cap This is an unbelievable camera. the 12x zoom combined with IS puts it in a class of its own! i had tried using my friends 10x zoom with out IS as well as the canon s2. the canon s2 was producing crisp clear images while my friends nikon was struggling at full zoom. The manual mode offers unbelievable control over the pictures that you take, allowing you to take pictures that other point and shoot camera wouldnt have been able to handle, especially in low light conditions. But to completely utilise its shutter speed capabilities, you would need a tripod. 90% of readers found this review helpful. Did you find it helpful or unhelpful? Top
Reply by member: Docster
Oct 27, 2005 RE: Lens Cap; Buy the conversion lens adapter and screw on a clear UV filter, which serves to protect the lens and you'll no longer need the lens cap. Canon's design of the lens cap was excellent; it prevents damage to the zoom motor for those who forget to remove it before turning the power on. The lens cap ease of falling off has been a common complaint, which I feel is unwarranted and believe it to be by design.
Reply by member: wideboy
Feb 14, 2006 Regarding the lens cap issue I agree with canons philosophy of (trying) to protect the zoom motor from extending accidently whilst a fixed lens cap is in place.
Reply by member: carlen309
Jun 22, 2006 Lens cap issue:
By member:
shouyi
- Aug 30, 2005
A Keeper!Strengths: pretty good optical image stabilization, full manual controls, and support for conversion lenses, use AA battery with a good battery life. Weakness: Lens cap falls off easiely. Flash not popping up automatically(could be a plus). Zoom at 12x not very good for slightly moving objects. Camera performance is superb.. The S2 starts up quickly, there's no shutter lag, and shot-to-shot and playback times are OK. Still have not got my hand on faster media to see if the speed will improve yet. Focusing speeds aren't quite as speedy. 83% of readers found this review helpful. Did you find it helpful or unhelpful? Top
By member:
llsp2
- Aug 1, 2005
Canon PowerShot S2 IS 5 Megapixel Compact Camera -...Strengths: Everything! Ease of use, video capabilities, zoom, picture quality, image stabilizer, scene selections. Weakness: The lens cover does not stay on well. For some people, the size would be a weakness. For me, I prefer a bigger, more solid camera. I absolutely LOVE this camera! I previously owned the Canon G2, which was a great camera as well. When a repair was going to cost me $200, I decided I'd be better off upgrading than repairing. I was initially irritated about spending the money, but now I am thankful that I had to!! I took my camera on our vacation, and am thrilled to death with every aspect of it. The pictures are beautiful, the 12X zoom really allowed me to take pictures that otherwise would have been worthless, and the video quality was so good that I didn't even bother to carry my video camera with me (which was a DEFINATE bonus!). You'll definately want to invest in a big memory card. I bought a 1 gig, took over 100 pictures, and 5 short videos, and used about half of the card (and didn't have to change my AA batteries once, even with the kids using the review PLENTY!). Everything was shot using the highest quality settings. The camera is extremely easy to use, the buttons are all very comfortable, and I personally like the larger size of the S2. The scene selection settings are a great feature too. I was able to get some good beach pictures using the "snow" setting, that otherwise would have been too bright (unless you're a more advanced photographer, and know how to use the manual settings, which I'm not). And finally, the speed is very good. Much better than my G2 was. You can take several pictures in succession, with barely a pause. The only true flaw that I can find is the lens cover, which falls off constantly. I'm hopeful though, that with enough complaints Canon will make a replacement cap available. All in all I HIGHLY recommend the Powershot S2. It is WELL worth the $450 - $500 you'll spend on it. 88% of readers found this review helpful. Did you find it helpful or unhelpful? Top
By member:
sesat123
- Aug 1, 2005
A great camera! It has all the features I want.Strengths: 12x IS zoom, excellent image/video quality, very good performance, manual control, AA battery, a lot of features (flip&twist lcd, super macro) Weakness: bulky size, small lcd size, noisy when ISO is avobe 200, button is not sensitive. Among Panasonic FZ5, Sony H1 and Canon S2 IS, finally I choose Canon S2 IS because of its video function and SD memory format. I have owned a olymbus c4000 for two years, Canon S2 IS certainly outperforms c4000 in every aspect. 12x zoom produces excellent picture at ISO 50, IS works great, high quality video, very short start up time, assistant lamp helps focus under the low light, battery life is good, plus a lot of features, flip lcd, super macro... 80% of readers found this review helpful. Did you find it helpful or unhelpful? Top
By member:
baylward
- Jul 30, 2005
Powershot s2Strengths: Great focal length, fast zoom, lots of control if you want to do more than "auto" setting. Well built with a good feel. Weakness: The SD card is a joke, need to buy a bigger one. The menu takes a bit of getting use to. Some noise with faster shutter speeds. This is a great camera for most everyone. The focal length is huge! The image stabilizer works well on the long shot, but you really need a tripod to keep the image crisp. I found the recycle time between shots to be good. When properly set up you can capture shot after shot until your card fills up. The video function is unbelievable. I didn't buy it for that feature, but I end up using it a lot. The auto focus works well, but I'm still struggling with the best way to use it. All in all this is a great unit. Once you get over the learning curve you can take some great photos. 75% of readers found this review helpful. Did you find it helpful or unhelpful? Top
By member:
larriemac
- Jul 18, 2005
Canon PowerShot S2 IS cameraStrengths: Great lens, high power zoom Good, intuitive menus, except for resolution Why would "L" mean highest? Tremendous degree of control Ability to zoom in on pic in camera Great manual Shortcut key Weakness: Included card and batteries Size and weight Confusing resolution symbols Movie format Flash doesn't pop up Wow, a terrific camera. 92% of readers found this review helpful. Did you find it helpful or unhelpful? Top
Reply by member: cjw7
Oct 26, 2005 I too have this camera and love it! I am having a bit of a problem with some pictures being "fuzzy". Why? If they aren't "fuzzy" they are amazingly crisp and clear. Fantastic. Why are some fuzzy?
By member:
cjthurman
- Jul 17, 2005
The Last Digital Camera I'll OwnStrengths: 12x optical zoom, picture qulity, fast and quiet zoom Weakness: The lens cap never stays on I've owned several different digital cameras over the last few years (including Nikon and Olympus) and, after taking this one out of the box, I knew the time had come for me to stop my searching for that "perfect camera" (or almost perfect). Yes, it's bigger than most, but I was never really concerned with size. I don't need a camera that I can just slip into a pocket, but I would like one that has a large zoom, takes excellent photos, and one that is not so heavy that I feel like my arm is going to fall off. I haven't done much field testing yet, but have several trips planned and can't wait to take it out and see how it does. I do wish Canon would design another lens cap for it. I would even pay extra to purchase it! Bottom line - I feel this is an excellent camera for a very reasonable price and that is has a lot of potential. 87% of readers found this review helpful. Did you find it helpful or unhelpful? Top
Reply by member: mianne
Aug 22, 2005 No point in paying Canon to fix what should have been done right from the start. (Did they not test the lens cap at all?)
Reply by member: Docster
Oct 27, 2005 I concur, buy the conversion lens adapter and screw on a clear UV filter, which serves to protect the lens and you'll no longer need the lens cap. Canon's design of the lens cap was excellent; it prevents damage to the zoom motor for those who forget to remove it before turning the power on. The lens cap ease of falling off has been a common complaint, which I feel is unwarranted. I believe it was by design.
By member:
ricochet81
- Jul 14, 2005
great camera, no complaintsStrengths: 12x zoom, amazing pictures, doesnt use proprietary battery, can add attachments(1.5x telephoto, macro, wide angle, filters), LiMH batteries lasted me 700 pix + video, configurability is amazing Weakness: the sounds (esp voices) are a little high in movie mode, eyepiece is an LCD which I'm still not sure how I feel about, menu button accidentally gets pushed with my large hands, cap falls off I've had the camera about 3 weeks now. It is amazing. Its does all this cool things, it is totally configurable: exposure, scene, film speed, fireworks mode (which worked quite well on the 4th), my colors is cool, but I dont know if I'll use it.., I researched cameras for awhile and settled on this one even though it didn't come out for a month after I decided. I also purchased the telephoto attachment (my opinion on that is that it is not a huge improvement, its 1.5x magnification), and the 58mm Macro lens, which also isn't a huge improvement, but it allows you to take shots of small things from within half of a meter, to use those you also have to buy the adapter for a little more than $20. My macro was $90ish, telephoto was $110ish both Canon brand. It takes amazing pictures, comes with a nice strap, The stock lens cap does fall off, and is quite annoying. I usually just leave my attachment on now and dont use the stock cap. All in all, the camera is amazing, and I've spent quite a few hours reading through the manual. I was considering an SLR, but this was ~ half the price considering 12x zoom, and smaller. I would recommend to anyone interested in more than point-and-shoot cameras. It's not small enough to carry in your pocket for those "what if I see a good picture" moments. I am truly thrilled with it. Good luck. 86% of readers found this review helpful. Did you find it helpful or unhelpful? Top
By member:
JohnaFountain
- Jul 13, 2005
Great Camera but no SLR replacement.Strengths: 12x Zoom Consistently good pictures Fast opertation Price Weakness: Noise... Movie mode needs better compression 1 gig hs card only 9 Min. video ! This is the swiss army knife of cameras ! One camera that does it all very well. Consistantly good images. Fast operation. Swivel LCD. Feels better made than S1 (previous model). Zoom galore. Noise is definitley the culprit. Over iso 100 is a problem if you view pics at 100%. Wish is had 28 wide !!! Movie mode needs Mpeg-4 compression. 80% of readers found this review helpful. Did you find it helpful or unhelpful? Top
By member:
zjdoris
- Jul 12, 2005
niceStrengths: Look really professional and cool. 12x zoom is a plus. The quality of the pictures are georgeous. Weakness: A little noisy and bulky Overall, it is a great camera. The pictures come out really nice. The 12x zoom makes it easy to capture things far away, which also makes it bulky. Would recommend! 40% of readers found this review helpful. Did you find it helpful or unhelpful? Top
By member:
freezedried74
- Jul 12, 2005
Canon Powershot S2Strengths: Great picture quality, many features. Weakness: Large size for a point and shoot camera. Flip out LCD is useless. This is a great camera for taking high quality point and shoot pictures. The size of the camera is a little large for my liking and I feel that the flip out lcd screen serves no purpose. Great camera if you do not mind the size. Many features which are easy to use. 20% of readers found this review helpful. Did you find it helpful or unhelpful? Top
By member:
Topstar79
- Jul 12, 2005
Excellent Camera with lots of featuresStrengths: 12x Zoom with Image Stablization, AF Assist Lamp, Swivel LCD, Video Capturing Quality, Fast Startup Weakness: Trouble Focusing, Lens Cap, Size Overall I really love this camera. This camera has great picture quailty and excellent video quality. With 12x zoom and Image Stablization, you gotta love it. The swivel LCD is a great feature because it allows you to take photos from below and above without having to struggle to see if you have the right shot. Also, it protects it from scratches when not in use. 89% of readers found this review helpful. Did you find it helpful or unhelpful? Top
By member:
Jim_in_Seal_Beach_CA
- Jul 6, 2005
The PowerShot S-2 is a truely great camera! Takes...Strengths: The 12x zoom is very sharp. On top of the 12x zoom is a 4x digital zoom providing suprisingly sharp 48x. Protected, sharp 1.8 inch LCD screen. Video slide show. Lots of manual controls plus full auto. Weakness: “Change the batteries” warning appears after 150 pictures on 4 Duracells. Won’t run on cheap house brand alkalines. Must carry spares. Get 2 sets of NiMH batteries to have charged for any outing. The PowerShot S-2 is a truely great camera! Takes great long distance shots without the huge size and cost of a digital SLR with a zoom lens. The image stabilization works great to get crisp hand held long shots. The PowerShot S-2 feels solid, and is easy to hold. The 1.8 inch view screen stays protected until you fold it out, so it is not getting bashed and scratched like most of them on other cameras. The flash is powerful enough to provide nice fill flash for pictures of my friends, with the beautiful Maui setting sun behind them. There are tons of manual controls as well as full Auto mode. I am really amazed by the clarity of the Canon optics. The utility of a great zoom is amazing: for times like graduation when the parents must stay far away from the graduate receiving a diploma, or nature shots where the bird is 30 feet away. There was a 30 ft catamaran anchored 100 yards of shore from our condo in Maui. With the 48x zoom, the 3 inch high registration numbers on the bow were clearly legible. in a hand held shot. I could not read the numbers with my 7x35 binoculars! I was blown away when I saw my chance picture of a 4 inch wide red crab on the rocks 15 feet below the pier at Lahaina on my 14 inch PowerBook. That crab filled the whole picture with the color and detail of a nature magazine. I can’t climb out on slippery rocks, so this camera takes me to places I couid never physically go. When viewing the images on the LCD view screen or in the color viewfinder, they can be blown-up and scrolled up and down to check fine details of any image, on the spot, not later using Photoshop. This feature also works if the images are sent to your TV via the provided video cable. It can also send a 3 second per image slide show to your TV. Maximum resolution provides a 2.3MB file size, so a 512MB card can take about 210 pictures. The PowerShot S-2 is slightly more compact than the other 12x cameras, also has a focus assist infrared lamp which helps insure sharp focus in a dark place. I love the PowerShot S-2 and feel the features and image quality are well worth the $459 I paid. 97% of readers found this review helpful. Did you find it helpful or unhelpful? Top
Reply by member: NRJYZD1
Jul 11, 2005 I agree the power requirements are substantial, but with rechargable batteries you can limit the cost.
Reply by member: D_Askin
Oct 25, 2005 My husband just purchased this camera for me. I had a hard time choosing between a sony,olympus and the canon. What I would like to know is what you are referring to as units, and what you mean by them.
Reply by member: Outcast_Searcher
Mar 21, 2006 From context, I believe the reviewer means one of these cameras itself (bought new in factory sealed box) as a "unit".
Reply by member: Catalinaqu
Mar 22, 2006 I just want to know if I can avoid store bought alkaline batteries and use a rechargeable batterie for this particular unit. My previous Canons all use rechargable batteries, and I find those to be the best and most convenient.
Reply by member: thanho
Jun 4, 2006 Thank you very much for sharing the information. I would like to know one more thing about this model is if it's capable of doing Photo Date/Time Stamping. I want to buy this camera for my mother and she insists that any camera I buy for her must have this option. Thanks for sharing.
By member:
tiekuai
- Jul 6, 2005
Canon PowerShot S2 IS 5 Megapixel Compact Camera -...Strengths: verg good quality camera.very good image quality Weakness: i dont find any... the camera is one of the best.it has stable system and it has a large zoom and good px.Lots of manual controls as well as full Auto mode... 67% of readers found this review helpful. Did you find it helpful or unhelpful? Top
By member:
theocean
- Jul 5, 2005
Canon PowerShot S2 IS 5 Megapixel Compact Camera -...Strengths: - Great Optical Zoom 12X - USB 2.0 transfer rate - Nice Design - Great battery life - Expandability - Nice LCD Design( it can be rotated up to 180 degrees) Weakness: - A little bit heavy I didn't read any previous reviews but I recommend this one to everyone. I absolutely happy with good battery life. USB 2.0 was really helpful. You can take a picture while you are in the movie mode. If you want small digital camera this is not a choice. 80% of readers found this review helpful. Did you find it helpful or unhelpful? Top
By member:
agl4
- Jul 2, 2005
Canon PowerShot S2 IS 5 Megapixel Compact Camera -...Strengths: 12x optical zoom, image stabilizer Ultrasonic, video capture at 640x480 30fps, great photo quality Weakness: Menu & set buttons are in the wrong site. I always accidentally pressed that buttons while shooting :( This is one of the best 5MP Digital Camera with 12x optical zoom, image stabilizer Ultrasonic, and video capture at 640x480 30fps. The camera size does not bother me at all. I defintely recommend this for anyone's looking to buy a digital camera. 84% of readers found this review helpful. Did you find it helpful or unhelpful? Top
By member:
htwxq
- Jul 2, 2005
Canon PowerShot S2 IS 5 Megapixel Compact Camera -...Strengths: nice ISO 50 picture quality, flip/swing LCD, great optical zoom range Weakness: very noisy from ISO 200 on, Very easy to use, extremely fast zoom and quiet operation, really good image stablizer, fairly good video quality. works good in Low light, focus hunting. It even has a number of new great features like super-macro, you can even copy-theft a book or magazine! And incredible shutter speed. Even though it's noisy from ISO 200 on, the photo is still much better than what produces by Minolta Dimage series. 77% of readers found this review helpful. Did you find it helpful or unhelpful? Top
By member:
tsscrapper
- Jun 30, 2005
Canon PowerShot S2 IS 5 Megapixel Compact Camera -...Strengths: Megapixel size is good for the average user. Camera size is great size, with lots of great features. Easy to use right out of the box! Weakness: LCD screen is a little bit small. No external flash foot (but I've been told there's a way of connecting an external flash for extra light). I've been waiting for this camera to be released for several months. Really liked the previous model but wanted higher megapixels. Was thrilled when the new model came out and had what I wanted included. Am a home user, active scrapbooker, didn't want anything too complicated so this is just the ticket. 81% of readers found this review helpful. Did you find it helpful or unhelpful? Top
By member:
dquant
- Jun 27, 2005
Canon PowerShot S2 IS 5 Megapixel Compact Camera -...Strengths: 12x zoom, image stabilization, quick power-up, hand grip. Great movie mode, very sharp quality. Weakness: Sometimes slow/hard to focus, flash does not pop up automatically...one has to open it by hand. great camera! The 12x zoom is awesome. Camera feels good in hands, but not something that will fit in your pocket. Camera build feels substantial, even though it's mostly plastic. 86% of readers found this review helpful. Did you find it helpful or unhelpful? Top
By member:
Beekay
- Jun 23, 2005
Canon PowerShot S2 IS 5 Megapixel Compact Camera -...Strengths: 12x Zoom Supermacro capabilty Weakness: None significant Great camera, the 12x zoom is very good and the supermacro capability is amazing in such a camera. Has numerous selections for special pictures however the manual settings are a little cumbersome. However for the price it is an excellent camera. 71% of readers found this review helpful. Did you find it helpful or unhelpful? Top
By member:
fluffyvee
- Jun 23, 2005
Canon PowerShot S2 IS 5 Megapixel Compact Camera -...Strengths: 12x zoom 5.0 mp Weakness: big, but fits in your hands well. Price This is a good camera for less then a digital SLR camera. It has a good zoom and the image stabilizer helps so much if you shake alot. 63% of readers found this review helpful. Did you find it helpful or unhelpful? Top
By member:
larrybird
- Jun 21, 2005
Canon PowerShot S2 IS 5 Megapixel Compact Camera -...Strengths: Excellent photo quality Big LCD display 12x zoom Fast speed. and quiet operation Weakness: Expensive Heavy Red eye This camera is definitely a good choice among 5MP cameras. The photo quality is superb, and the operation is easy to follow. The start up speed is fast, which is very helpful in catching some sudden events. The camera is kind of heavy and expensive. The red eye effect is still annoying, just like the fuji finepix 2400 I previously owned. 75% of readers found this review helpful. Did you find it helpful or unhelpful? Top
By member:
zhuchok
- Jun 20, 2005
Canon PowerShot S2 IS 5 Megapixel Compact Camera -...Strengths: * Excellent photo quality (even in low light conditions). * Fast start up speed. * Less red eye pictures. * Ergonomic one-hand operation design. * Smooth and quiet ultrasound motor. * 12x zoom. Weakness: Lens cap may fall off occasionally, but this should not matter much, if you keep the cap tied to the camera strap and use a quality padded case to protect the camera. I love this camera! I have used Olympus C4040 > Pentax Optio 555 > Olympus Stylus 500, but each one of these cameras had something wrong about them. Canon PowerShot S2 IS, on the hand, is fast 5MP camera that works rather well in low-light conditions (I tested it in a totally dark room and the camera worked very well!). I also like that S2 uses standard AA batteries rather than an expensive proprietary one. In addition, unlike all the Olympus cameras I used, Canon PowerShot S2 IS uses popular SD-format digital media. 87% of readers found this review helpful. Did you find it helpful or unhelpful? Top
By member:
daydaydvd
- Jun 17, 2005
Canon PowerShot S2 IS 5 Megapixel Compact Camera -...Strengths: IS function, and very sharp picture. 12x room is super Weakness: a litte bit heavy comparing with most of digital camera. IS function is very useful since I always take pic inside house, and you can not use flash in most times that other camera need. I like the "true" pic without flash. If Canon can make it smaller, it will be perfect. 67% of readers found this review helpful. Did you find it helpful or unhelpful? Top
Reply by member: BattleKnight
Jul 31, 2005 A wide aperture could help & give you a quality picture rather than power consuming flash. Manufacturer must improve more on the aperture & ISO equivalencies. However client should sacrifice a bit of the price.
By member:
slyreptile
- Jun 15, 2005
Canon PowerShot S2 IS 5 Megapixel Compact Camera -...Strengths: Great photo quality, huge zoom, great macro shots, quickly powers up for fast shooting Weakness: Software package, lens cover This is one of the better cameras I have used. It has many great features such as the 12x optical zoom, the DIGIC II chip (speeds the camera functions up), and the My Colors option is fun to use. It allows a color to be swapped with another color. The only few negatives I have found with it are the lens cover. It doesn't stay on. Also, the software it comes with is a bit poor and doesn't allow for much editing. Not advanced at all. I'd recommend getting a professional image editor if you need to doctor your photos. In all, though, this is a great camera to use and I'm having fun using it. 87% of readers found this review helpful. Did you find it helpful or unhelpful? Top
By member:
gazrcom
- Jun 14, 2005
Canon PowerShot S2 IS 5 Megapixel Compact Camera -...Strengths: 12x ZOOM (WOW!) Image stabilizer. Looks. Feel. Rebate if you have brought a Canon printer. Weakness: Uses SD cards, although these are getting bigger and dropping in price. Only had this a day and already blows away my A80, which I sold ;) There are few cameras that can compete with this one right now, but there are others that are due out from other manufacturers this Summer and Fall, so you may want to wait for the prices to stabilize before purchasing this. If you want the next best thing now, you can't go wrong with the Canon S2. 80% of readers found this review helpful. Did you find it helpful or unhelpful? Top
By member:
docvenzon
- Jun 11, 2005
Canon PowerShot S2 IS 5 Megapixel Compact Camera -...Strengths: 12x zoom with image stabilization, easy to use point and shoot but with a slew of options for those looking for more control Weakness: relatively expensive, not compact, but what do you expect from a 12x zoom digital camera I bought this as a second camera to use, in addition to my Canon A510. I specifically wanted for the 12x optical zoom with image stabilization, which minimizes blurriness of images. I've enjoyed using it for outside shots, nature shots. It's bigger and heavier than the A510, but it's a different class of camera for a different purpose, so I don't consider that a negative. It is very to use, the controls are intuitive, and the buttons are all easily accessible. I would have preferred a bigger grip for the right hand to make it more ergonomic, but that may just be me and my hand size. Overall, this is a fantastic camera, albeit relatively expensive. 87% of readers found this review helpful. Did you find it helpful or unhelpful? Top
By member:
waveking
- Jun 7, 2005
An all rounderStrengths: 5 MP, 12x zoom, focus-assist lamp, powerful inbuilt flash Weakness: manual focus perhaps on the lens ring itself would have been great I have been using the earlier model of this camera - the S1, and though it served most of my purposes, it still lacked something...and all that it missed, went mentally in my wish list....and EVERY item of that has been incorporated in the Canon S2...thanks canon!! This is now a camera worth having...superb value for money...packed with quality features and performance. 70% of readers found this review helpful. Did you find it helpful or unhelpful? Top
Reply by member: sludema
Jun 8, 2005 How is the shutter lag speed? Comparing to the Panasonic FZ5.
Reply by member: Deevid
Jun 8, 2005 I talked to canon and tried to find out the lag time on the shutter and they told me that
Reply by member: Deevid
Jun 13, 2005 I Talked to canon again and they told me all digital camera had shutter lag timed do to the auto focusing. If you hold the button half down until your shot come up it clicks within a fraction of a second.
testseek.com - Nov 5, 2008
Canon PowerShot S2 IS
Testseek.com has collected 33 expert reviews for Canon PowerShot S2 IS and the average expert rating is 82 of 100. The average score reflects the expert community’s view on this product. Click below and use Testseek.com to see all ratings, product awards and conclusions. Top
photographyblog.com - Sep 19, 2007
Canon Powershot S5 IS Review
The Canon PowerShot S5 IS is Canon's top-of-the-range ultra-zoom compact camera, with an image-stabilized 12x optical zoom lens offering a focal range of 36-432mm, fast aperture range of f/2.7 – f/3.5 and an Ultrasonic Motor for silent auto-focusing. With an external flash hot shoe for use with selected Canon EX Speedlites, chunky hand grip and mode wheel, the S5 IS is very much styled like an... Top
Digitalcamerainfo.com - Dec 2, 2005
Canon PowerShot S2 IS Digital Camera Review
The Canon PowerShot S2 picks up where the PowerShot S1 IS left off. The S1 brought Canon into the ultra zoom race for compact cameras, demonstrating that Canon was capable of transferring both their DV technology and advanced lens construction into consumer-level digital cameras. The S2 furthers the effort and provides some useful upgrades. Among the modifications are a wider and longer zoom... Top
letsgodigital.org - Nov 20, 2005
Canon Powershot S2 IS
The Canon Powershot S2 IS camera is the successor of the Canon S1 IS and is a worthy one. The 5 Megapixel resolution, fast auto focus, the image processing speed due to the DIGIC II processor and its overall versatility are lifting the Canon S2 IS to a higher level than its competitors. The excellent working stabilization combined with the high resolution is great to work with! Read our review... Top
Imaging Resource - Jun 28, 2005
Canon PowerShot S2 IS
The long-zoom digital camera market is getting pretty crowded these days, so it takes a lot for a product to really stand out. Despite the stiff competition though, the Canon PowerShot S2 IS is indeed just such a standout product. Building upon the already very popular S1 IS model, the Canon S2 IS shows substantial improvements in just about every parameter: Resolution is substantially higher,... Top
DCResource - Jun 12, 2005
DCRP Review: Canon PowerShot S2 IS
The original PowerShot S1 was a great ultra zoom camera, but it had several flaws that kept it out of the top spot. Those flaws included poor low light focusing (due to the lack of an AF-assist lamp), a small LCD display, above average noise and purple fringing, a 1GB movie limit, and the lack of a histogram in record mode. The good news is that Canon has fixed most of those things on the new... Top
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Black Screen DIY
Strengths: Great Camera
Weakness: CCD issue, black Screen of death
This is a great camera and i had been using this for atleast 2 years, taken nearly 3k-4k pictures with it.
the most important thing i like about this camera is the ZOOM, its a killer, and the most important thing i dint like is its bulky, nevertheless have so many cameras in market which is less bulky with a good zoom capability, but i like my S2.
recently seeing that many other owners complaining about Black screen of death, so gathered some pictures of how to dismatle the camera to reach the CCD, here it is
hope this is helpful
sriramblox.blogspot.co...
Did you find it helpful or unhelpful?