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Canon PowerShot A1100 IS

Reviewed by Rod Lawton on 8 July 2009

Canon PowerShot A1100 IS front

What you need to know

Price: £116.7

Our rating: 3.0 stars out of 5

User rating: 1 stars out of 5 (out of 1 user review)

Verdict: The Canon PowerShot A1100 IS' no-nonsense design, layout and controls are refreshing. It's easy to figure out, and anyone could use it. But it's plasticky, the image quality isn't particularly impressive and it's not especially good value for money -- you can get a number of good, metal-bodied 10-megapixel cameras for less

Good

  • Chunky and practical design
  • Clear and straightforward controls
  • Has an optical viewfinder

Bad

  • Mediocre lens fails to exploit sensor
  • Quite pricy given the quality of the competition

Full review

Canon's PowerShot A1100 IS is simple, sturdy and straightforward. But it's not short on technology either -- you also get a 4x zoom, optical image stabilisation, a 12-megapixel sensor, face detection, motion detection and automatic scene recognition. In fact, on the face of it, this camera looks to be pretty good value, at around £150.

Positives
The finish is rather good. It's plastic, but it's got a pleasing, semi-matte sheen, and the pale blue of our review sample looks rather smart. This is a camera that's big enough to get a proper grip on, yet still compact enough to slip into a jacket pocket. The controls are clear, simple and well laid out.


You get good colours, decent contrast and accurate exposures with the A1100, but there's plenty of barrel distortion, and the definition in the corners of the frame is weak (click image to enlarge)

Unlike more expensive Canon cameras, this one ditches the rotary controller on the back and makes do perfectly well with standard directional buttons. Those buttons double as shortcuts for the EV compensation, focus, flash and self-timer modes.

With some cameras, you have to try to second-guess when they're going to use their face detection, but that's not the case with the A1100. There's a button on the back for switching it on and off -- it's as simple as that.

On the top is a chunky mode dial, with firm, positive click-stops. It looks slightly tacky, but it works really well. The LCD screen is rather weak, though, measuring just 64mm (2.5 inches) across the diagonal, and sporting a pretty low 115,000-pixel resolution. There's a small optical viewfinder, however. It's not brilliant, but it's worth having in bright light, when the LCD gets rather swamped.


The A1100's screen isn't huge, but you do also get an optical viewfinder

Power comes from a pair of AA batteries. Canon claims you'll get 140 shots on a set of alkalines and up to 350 with NiMH rechargeables. Those aren't particularly great figures, but they're adequate enough, and AAs are easy enough to come by if you need them in a hurry.

This is a refreshingly straightforward camera to use. Everything is clear and logically laid out and you'll pick it all up very quickly.

Negatives
The A1100's image quality is pretty lacklustre. It has a 12-megapixel sensor, which isn't bad at this price, but the 4x optical zoom doesn't really make the best of it. There's a good deal of barrel distortion at the wideangle end of the zoom, the definition in the corners is fairly weak, and there's some noticeable corner shading (vignetting) in some shots, too.


The test chart shows only average definition for a 12-megapixel sensor, and there are plenty of cheaper 10-megapixel models which offer similar definition (click image to enlarge)

You can't expect miracles at this price, of course, but it does put the A1100 in a slightly tricky position. Frankly, you can get similar or better results from a whole bunch of cheaper 10-megapixel cameras. Which would you rather have: 12 megapixels and a plastic body or 10 megapixels and a metal one (plus a £20 note to slip in your pocket)?

Conclusion
The Canon PowerShot A1100 IS is down-to earth, functional and easy to use. It's big enough to grip, the controls are clear and it gets its power from easily obtainable disposable batteries. Canon even throws in a 128MB SD card. But it's slightly too expensive when you look at what else you can get for the money.

Edited by Charles Kloet

Key specs

Product type Compact
Available colours Silver, Blue, Pink
Resolution 12.1 megapixels
Optical zoom 4 x
Screen size 2.52 in.

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