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Canon PowerShot A95

Reviewed by Theano Nikitas on 8 November 2004

What you need to know

Price: £185

Our rating: 3.5 stars out of 5

User rating: Not yet rated

Verdict: When it comes to features and image quality, this camera is at the top of its class

Good

  • Full feature set for its class
  • Impressive photo quality
  • Quick access to important settings via Function button
  • Accepts accessory lenses
  • Underwater housing available

Bad

  • Stiff CompactFlash slot cover with flimsy hinge
  • Grip may be uncomfortable for larger hands

Full review

Canon's 5-megapixel PowerShot A95 steps up as the capable successor to the highly popular A80. As the A series' momentary flagship model, the A95 offers simplicity for entry-level photographers, a versatile feature set for more experienced shooters, and excellent image quality for both.

Design
The camera's design remains essentially the same, with only a few changes. It's a slightly smaller and lighter -- 235g with CompactFlash card and four AA batteries -- package than its predecessor. Canon has tweaked a few items, such as putting the Set and Menu buttons below the 46mm (1.8-inch) LCD. It's not the most convenient placement, but given the additional dedicated buttons (Function; display and print/share; and a four-way controller and a record/playback slider), there's no room elsewhere. And though this model's flip-and-twist LCD is a hair larger (by 8mm) than the A80's, it's still on the small side, relative to other cameras' 52mm (2-inch) LCDs. But we gladly trade off size for the swivel.

We have a few small design gripes. The power button is slightly recessed from the top of the camera and set towards the centre, so it takes a stretch and a search to turn on the camera. We'd also like the grip to be just a little bigger for a firmer handhold. And finally, the plastic CompactFlash slot cover is flimsy and clumsy to open.

Features
Yet those complaints pale in the face of the Canon PowerShot A95's other attributes, such as its well-rounded feature set and excellent image quality. Snapshot photographers will feel comfortable with the Auto, Program AE and scene modes, as well as the one-touch print/share function. More experienced users will gravitate toward the aperture-priority, shutter-priority and manual exposure options. Digging deeper and you'll find selectable ISO, custom white balance, sharpening adjustments, and other features for more in-depth tweaking. Though it provides a mere 3x, 38-114mm (35mm equivalent) optical zoom, the A95 accepts the same lens adapter and add-on lenses as the A80.

Canon improves the nine-point autofocus system with FlexiZone, the company's market-speak for user-selectable focus points. This is particularly helpful when your subject is off-centre; you just move the focus point. On the other hand, sometimes it's faster to focus off-centre, recompose and shoot. Also new to the A95 is ID photo printing, which eliminates the need to have passport pictures taken elsewhere. But its limited movie capabilities -- it can handle only 30 seconds of VGA-quality video -- fall short of many competitors'.

Performance
Though it performs respectably, the last-generation Digic chip in the A95 struggles to hold its own compared to better-optimised competitors. In most cases, we were able to grab the first shot in a little more than 3 seconds from power-on. Shot-to-shot times ranged between 2 and 3 seconds, the latter with flash, with shutter lag averaging around 1 second. Two continuous-shooting modes let us snap up to 14 pictures at a rate of about 1.5fps; go into Fast mode, and you'll get a continuous, unlimited capture at 2.2fps.

Image quality
Like its predecessor, the A95 delivers excellent photo quality. On our test shots, the PowerShot produced well-exposed images, rendered colours relatively accurately -- though cooler than we usually expect -- and nicely saturated. As usual for Canon, the A95's auto white balance failed miserably under our difficult tungsten lights. Noise was minimal at ISO 50, though it was higher than usual at ISO 100, and there was only occasional purple fringing along high-contrast edges. We did notice some flash falloff in the corners of macro images, but it was generally minor.

If you're willing to forgo cutting-edge performance in exchange for a strong set of features and excellent photo quality, then the Canon PowerShot A95 should make it on to your short list.

Edited by: Lori Grunin
Additional editing by: Nick Hide

Key specs

Product type Compact
Available colours Silver
Resolution 5 megapixels
Optical zoom 3 x
Screen size 1.81 in.

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