Share your experience!
I bought a HX200V camera some days ago. I have taken some pictues with different settings. It looks great on the camera, however when i import them to my computer they dont look good.
When I zoom to 100% of the picture it gets corny. I have a very old canon powershot s 70 and when i compare the pictures i think the canon powershot take much much better pictures.
I have mostly used Auto (The green, but also tried the yellow), but have tried different settings. Im not good with photo settings.
So based on a few of my examples, am i doing anything wrong and the photos are horrible or am i just to picky?
Hello nilshv - Welcome to the Sony Forums
By 'corny', do you mean that the picture is getting pixelated when you go to the highest level of zoom? If so, this may be because the camera is reverting from the optical zoom (the work is being done by the lens) to digital zoom (where the camera processor takes over) and when it passes this mark, this is where pixelation can occur.
To turn the digital zoom off, take a look at this section of the user guide:
You may find this version easier to navigate than the manual! Turning it off will prevent the zoom going beyond the capabilities of the optical zoom lens. If this doesn't improve your images, let me know and I will take a look at the attached images in the forum (they won't open for me at the moment but that may be more of an issue at my end than yours).
Thanks,
Simon
I think that these images represent the quality which is to be expected fron the camera, I do not think there is something wrong with it.
I agree with cmosse, the images you posted up look ok to me. The flowers look odd because they're out of focus. You should check that the camera hasn't locked-on to the table or wall behind, as seems to be the case here, before you take the shot.
I wouldn't say you're being picky at all, in fact I admit to being a little surprised myself, the first time I saw an HX-series image at 100%. Indeed, the 'corny' look you refer to has had a lot of people disconcerted, but I believe the issue is more down to the way experienced users have come to expect a digital shot to look at 100%.
The short explanation is that these cameras are designed to work like this: intended for advanced amateur use, they look their best at reasonable reproduction sizes. Poster-sized prints, large-screen displays etc should be quite possible and should look perfectly 'normal' at normal viewing distances, but the expectation is that HX-series users will rarely, if ever, display anything more than A4-sized versions of their shots. At that size they can and often do look stunning...
The smoothing and de-noising algorithms used in the HX-series do produce an odd-looking, mottled appearance at 100%, but they are sharpened and tonally-adjusted, as well as smoothed, in order to be print-ready straight out of the camera. That's why they look so good when displayed smaller, as you don't see the processing artifacts (corny stuff) this tends to produce.
My suggestion to users who want to fix their own noise, check the image at pixel level and correct tone and sharpness from RAW files, is to move up to an alpha-series, such as a NEX-5.
Cheers
Mick