The shiny loveliness that's the Fujifilm X20 was shipped to Pocket-lint now, and we have since go about - within the chilly United kingdom snowfall, believe it or not - nipping away some initial shots to determine how this high-finish compact works.
We'll save all of the primary meat for the forthcoming full review, but getting used the X20 for a day we are able to make sure it's just as much - or even more - of the pleasure for its X10 predecessor was. It's all regulated retro-styled silver with chunky knobs and dials along with a traditional twist-barrel 28-112mm f/2-2.8 equivalent contact lens.
READ: Fujifilm X10 review
The wide aperture creates wonderful shallow depth of area when combined with the twoOr3-inch-size, 12-megapixel sensor, that is bigger than present in most similar competitor models only at that cost point, save for that The new sony RX100.
The X20's new sensor also offers a unique trick up its sleeve, as squeezed from Fujifilm's own top-flight tech, namely its X-Pro1 compact system camera. The X20's 2/3-inch size X-Trans CMOS II sensor has - additionally to some rather silly title - done away using the low-pass filter towards Fujifilm's?proprietary colour array system. What this means is no anti-aliasing softens the look for processing reasons and, therefore, means sharp images beyond its medium sensor size are possible. From what we have seen we have reached agree - just browse the crisp ISO 100 sample shot below, proven popped to actual size (click for full-size image):
We have been shooting up and lower the ISO 100-3200 sensitivity range to determine the way the X20 handles low light and, generally, it is a success. However, we've observed an extremely steep increase in JPEG artefacts from round the ISO 400 mark and above, therefore the top-notch quality comes with an extremely steep curve off.
All of our JPEG shots happen to be taken in the default Fine setting - we have not modified the colour, Sharpness, Highlight Tone, Shadow Tone or Noise Reduction options inside the menu with this particular group of shots. It is good to possess such choices on board for fine-tuning to non-public preference though - something i will be digging much deeper into once we get a handle on your camera.
The X20 may also capture raw files which, without noise reduction processing applied, appear an additional lick of sharpness in the cheapest ISO configurations - particularly ISO 200 - however this dwindles into rather considerable image noise because the ISO sensitivity increases. As the ISO 1250 sample shot of flowers above looks wonderful only at that scale, click on the image for any 100 percent crop from the raw file where its far more noisy version is revealed.
Further in the sensitivity scale we discovered that ISO 3200 demonstrates off some image noise, out of the box to become expected, but it is a good sight much better than lots of other high-finish compact cameras.
The raw files also reveal some clever JPEG processing that corrects for chromatic aberration, namely the subtle crimson fringes that may be visible to subjects' edges, alongside some colour, contrast along with other tweaks. In the end love the subtle background blur that highlights the heron within the shot below, the entire-scale image does reveal a few of these pointed out minor flaws - click on the image to have a look in a portion of the original raw file:
Blurred background will get much more increased within the X20's macro mode - that is split into standard and Super Macro options. Both work incredibly near to the lens, right lower to some mere 1cm in the lens in the largest-position 28mm equivalent. The lens is sharp too shots at individuals lower ISO configurations look crisp and striking to the eyes. Mix by using the wide-open aperture and it is first class stuff.
Quality-smart the prior X10 model did raise some concerns using what many known as the "whitened orb" fiasco - a processing problem that triggered specular highlights to morph into whitened orbs. Could it be a name within the X20? From what we have seen to date, not whatsoever - which we'll put lower towards the completely new sensor. Obviously i will be shooting and searching at bundles more X20 shots within the future to determine the way the camera stands up, but we are confident at that point it's searching good.
Add an optical viewfinder with a brand new digital overlay to verify focus point, aperture setting and shutter speed and - regardless of the same 85 percent area of view according to the X10 - it's otherwise not only picture quality that's around the up, it's usability too the entire shebang.
Indeed the X20 looks to become one of the top high-spec compact cameras to conquer in 2013, yet for any pound shy of ?500 i was wishing it might impress. It may be a premium price, but it is top drawer too: each cent of this cash investment adopts a seem product from what we have seen.
I will be getting you our full Fujifilm X20 review within the future, so keep the eyes locked to Pocket-lint.
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Cameras Fujifilm Fujifilm X20
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
Fujifilm X20: The very first sample images initially made an appearance on http://world wide web.pocket-lint.com on Get married, 13 Marly 2013 18:35:00 +0000
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