Price range: £284.99
What is it: Compact 10-megapixel camera
What we think: Solid compact camera that takes sharp pictures and offers a good feature set, but JPEG quality should be better
Panasonic Lumix DMC-LX3 Review
Reviewed on: 18 February 2009
With its compact, elegant design and enthusiast-friendly feature set, the Panasonic Lumix DMC-LX3 is certainly a viable choice of camera when you need something more discreet than a digital SLR. The replacement for the LX2, the LX3 has an almost identical body design, same-to-better performance and improved photo quality. In our opinion, however, it comes up short when compared with its main competitor, the Canon PowerShot G10.
The LX3 is available now for around £320.
Design
At 258g, with dimensions of 109mm by 51mm by 63mm (with the lens retracted), the relatively compact LX3 fits comfortably in a jacket pocket.
There's a slightly pronounced grip up front and a small, bumpy thumb rest on the back, but neither seems quite enough. We frequently felt as if the camera was going to slip out of our hand. A firmer grip required covering some of the buttons with our thumb.
The LX3 manages its slim design because it lacks an optical viewfinder. Instead, Panasonic offers an external model, the DMW-VF1, which is quite pricey.
On top of the camera sits a hot shoe -- a welcome addition, and something that the LX2 lacked -- power switch, pop-up flash, focus point selector button, zoom switch and mode dial.
In addition to the program, aperture-priority, shutter-priority, manual, movie-capture and scene modes that are available with the LX2, plus the update from auto to Panasonic's intelligent auto mode, the dial includes two slots for custom settings. Although there are only two slots, the camera can store four groups of settings -- one set gets slotted in C1, while C2 stores three. This is an interesting approach that leaves one preset instantly accessible, while switching among the others requires a trip into the menus.
You can manually toggle aspect ratios via a switch atop the lens, while the switch for the autofocus, AF-macro and manual-focus modes lives on the left side of the lens. Unfortunately, the manual switch for the aspect ratio makes choosing the high-definition movie-capture mode (up to 1,280x720-pixel resolution at 30 frames per second) cumbersome -- when the switch is set to 4:3, HD movies aren't an option. And, since the non-4:3 aspect modes are all crops below full resolution, we really don't suggest using them unless you know you'll never need the parts of the photo that you're throwing away.

The rest of the controls sit adjacent to the bright, saturated, wide-aspect 76mm (3-inch) LCD on the camera's back. Although small, the buttons, switches and joystick are easy to feel and manipulate, unless you have really big fingers. Panasonic has added an AF/auto-exposure lock button, but otherwise the layout, although not the feel, is identical to the LX2's.
In addition, the LX3 has a capture/playback switch, quick-menu button/joystick, display and burst-shooting buttons. We really like the joystick but, as a button, it's not responsive enough -- it requires multiple presses to register and pull up the menu.
The four-button navigation pad that surrounds the menu button has dedicated buttons for the self-timer, flash and exposure compensation. The fourth button is a user-programmable function button, which you can set to quick review, film mode, ISO sensitivity, white balance, metering, AF mode or intelligent exposure.
Film mode provides a variety of preset combinations of contrast, sharpness, saturation and noise-reduction settings, and you can save two custom sets. There's also a multi-film mode, which saves three variations of a single photo with the three user-selected film settings.
Some other notable capabilities of the LX3 include 'pre AF', which locks focus when it senses the camera's at its steadiest, and selectable grouped AF points. The camera offers all the essentials, including optical image stabilisation, as well.
Performance
We don't understand why products in this class remain so slow. The LX3 also has fewer pixels to process than the G10, so we expected it to be faster than it is.
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