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Canon PowerShot S60 5 Megapixels And Abundant Controls Bookmark and Share
All Photos © 2004, George Schaub, All Rights Reserved

Canon PowerShot S60 Quick Look
• 5.0 Megapixels
• $499 (Street price)
• Canon 3.6x zoom lens

Further Information
Canon PowerShot S60
http://www.usa.canon.com

Whether you prefer to shoot on automatic or set your own picture effects using aperture and shutter speed, consider the compact Canon PowerShot S60 a very good traveling companion. With 5 megapixels and a Canon 3.6x zoom lens (15x using digital zoom), the S60 offers a bit wider angle of view than most (at the equivalent of 28mm) and a sturdy case with fully covered lens that makes you feel like you can pop it in a bag without fear of damage or dirt getting inside. Controls are easily accessible, with both auto and “Image Zone” settings (the preprogrammed setups for Portrait, Fast and Slow Shutter and a nice panorama mode called “Stitch Assist) and what Canon calls “Creative Zone” settings (aperture- and shutter-priority, as well as a Custom setting) on the top mounted Shooting mode dial. In addition, using the Function button, you access even more controls, including file size, drive modes, ISO, white balance and the so-called Photo Effects, including increased saturation, sepia, black and white, etc. In short, the svelte looking camera body offers access to a host of control and options with relative ease.

Using the stitching function accessed on the main camera dial it’s easy to create a series of overlapping images, which the supplied PhotoStitch software turns into a panorama. I didn’t crop to the four corners here to give you an idea of how a raw stitch looks, made in NYC’s Grand Central Station.

One of the nice surprises on this point-and-shoot looking model is the availability of raw file format, as well as various JPEG file sizes and compression ratios. And an even bigger surprise is that you can even change images you exposed using a JPEG file format to raw file format after the exposure is made, right in the camera. This is one way to select the “keepers” for the extensive post-processing benefits that raw provides. Unlike some other makers, Canon provides the raw converter program with the camera; it also gives you a simple movie edit program as well as PhotoStitch, essential for processing panorama files.

If you shoot raw and then open in the ZoomBrowser, a right click for Windows users opens the raw editing software. The full window shows a preview, the various raw controls and the image in large view. Once you move the sliders the picture previews, after a slight pause, to show your changes. You then Save As a TIFF or JPEG.

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