To help you choose which features you want and need, here’s a quick rundown of the most ubiquitous and popular.
Essential Digital Camera Features
Some features are must-haves. Just about everyone can benefit from these essentials.
Removable Memory Card: All but the most inexpensive digital cameras save images to memory cards. The capacity of memory cards varies widely. When you run out of space, it takes only seconds to pop in a spare card. To transfer pictures to a computer, remove the card and slide it into your computer’s memory card reader. Anti-Shake: Even the steadiest of hands aren’t completely still when pressing the shutter button, which can produce blurring, streaks, or soft focus when shooting in low light or when maxing out your telephoto lens. Anti-shake (image stabilization) helps neutralize jitters to produce sharper images. Many cameras allow you to turn off this feature, but it’s a good idea to leave it on at all times. Burst Mode: The Burst Mode function takes multiple shots in rapid succession like a pro’s motor drive so that you don’t miss that all-important action shot. The lag time between each image varies. Macro Mode: To capture detailed close-ups, such as an insect on a flower, use macro mode to focus within inches of your subject. How close you can shoot varies from one camera to another, so read the documentation before buying.
Digital Camera Features That Keep It Simple
For photographers who want to spend more time taking photos and less time making camera adjustments, these features fit the bill.
Autofocus: Even professional photographers tend to keep their cameras on autofocus. As long as you understand how it works by recognizing the areas of focus within the camera’s viewfinder, autofocus is usually better than manual focus. Auto Exposure: Making sure that you capture the right amount of light is key to good photography. Auto exposure makes decisions for you regarding relevant settings such as shutter speed and f-stop. Focus-Assist Lamp: A camera lens can’t focus in a dark room. Pressing the shutter halfway on many cameras produces a red or green light or a series of preflashes that provide just enough illumination for a camera’s auto-focus function to work correctly. Face Recognition: By identifying faces in a picture, this feature provides optimum exposure and focus for portraits or group shots. Best-Shot Selector: A camera may display several versions of a picture, either shot milliseconds apart or using various color or exposure settings. You select the one that you like best. Shooting Modes: Many cameras offer several preset modes for shutter speed, f-stop, and focus, appropriate to special situations like a beach, fireworks, or a moonlit landscape. AutoCorrect: For even greater versatility, you can adjust a picture’s exposure, color, and in some cases, shadows. Touchscreen: If you prefer not to bother with buttons, touchscreen controls, in which you use your finger or a stylus, can be more intuitive and quicker to use.
Digital Camera Features for Taking Control
These features are for experienced photographers who want to control every aspect of their photo sessions.
Aperture and Shutter Priority: Good exposure requires balancing the amount of light entering the camera (aperture or f-stop) with the duration of exposure (shutter speed). With aperture priority, you select the f-stop you want, and the camera chooses the shutter speed that gives you optimum exposure. With shutter priority, you set the shutter speed, and the camera selects the appropriate aperture. Manual Exposure: By uncoupling shutter speed and aperture, you can use your knowledge of photography and select the correct exposure, which is useful when shooting in mixed light or when you want to experiment with exposure. Manual White Balance: A powerful tool, white balance allows you to define what the camera “sees” as white, thereby eliminating any color shift caused by the ambient light. Incandescent (indoor) lighting and sunlight require different white balancing. Manual Focus: Sometimes, your camera’s auto-focus function locks in on the wrong focal point or subject. Manual focus allows you to take control of that aspect of your creativity and composition.
Interesting Features You May or May Not Use
Many photographers can find at least one feature in this list that works for them.
Video: Most cameras offer low-resolution video capability that’s appropriate for the web. Better cameras feature higher frame rates and full-frame size. Time Lapse: Set up your camera on a tripod to take a series of pictures over a period of time. Voice Recording: Use your camera to save conversations or memos about your pictures or to capture the sound around you. Panorama Assist: Frames in your viewfinder capture a series of pictures that can be stitched together using computer software into a panoramic view of a canyon or skyline. Wireless Remote: This is handy for self-portraits. Text Tagging: You can add captions or keywords to your picture files to identify them. Slide Show: Show compilations of your pictures on the camera’s screen or an attached TV or computer. With some cameras, save the slideshow and share it. Wireless Connectivity: If you want to send your photos to an email address, website, computer, or printer, wireless connectivity is the ticket.
Features of Dubious Value
If your dream camera doesn’t have these features, don’t lose sleep over it. You can do without them.
Red-Eye Preflash: A series of preflashes supposedly reduces red-eye by closing your subject’s pupils. However, all it does is annoy people and make them move out of pose because they think the picture has been taken. Red-eye removal tools available in a camera’s playback or photo editing software are preferable. Digital Zoom: Digital zoom merely spreads the pixels apart to appear to extend your telephoto lens while causing significant image degradation.