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Kodak V803 review at PhotographyBLOG
Mark Peters : May 25th 2007 - 10:47 CET
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Kodak V803 review at PhotographyBLOG : DIWA member Mark Goldstein from PhotographyBLOG has reviewed the Kodak EasyShare V803 camera. The 8 Megapixel Kodak V803 has 3x Kodak Retinar Aspheric all glass optical zoom Lenses, and comes in multiple signature color choices with fun accessories to match your personal style. The Kodak V803 is packed with smart features that make great picture taking incredibly simple, including new high ISO mode up to ISO 1600 for bright pictures when shooting under low light conditions. The Kodak EasyShare V803 offers 22 scene modes, including simple on-camera stitching for dynamic panorama shots and digital image stabilization using the anti-blur mode to prevent blurring from subject or hand movement.
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Kodak EasyShare V803 - Sharpening
According to Mark Goldstein: "The Kodak Easyshare V803 produced images of average quality during the review period. The 8 Megapixel images were soft straight out of the camera at the default sharpening setting and ideally require some further sharpening in an application like Adobe Photoshop, or you can increase the in-camera setting. The Kodak Easyshare V803 dealt well with chromatic aberrations, with limited purple fringing effects appearing only in high contrast situations."
Kodak V803 compact camera - Low light photography
Mark continues: "The built-in flash worked well indoors, with just a hint of red-eye and good exposure. The night photograph was fine, but the maximum shutter speed of 8 seconds doesn't allow you to capture enough light in some situations. The Kodak Easyshare V803 produces noise-free images at ISO 80 and 100, but ISO 200 shows some loss of detail. ISO 400 and 800 exhibit progressively more obvious blurred detail, and the fastest setting of 1600 should only be used in an emergency." You want to learn more about the Kodak EasyShare digital camera? Continue to read the Kodak V803 review at PhotographyBLOG.
About PhotographyBLOG
Mark Goldstein started his very active website PhotographyBLOG in January 2003. At first the one and only purpose was to let this site function as one of those popular web logs with Photography as main topic. But as we all know Photography is a pretty big subject to publish about so Mark decided to focus on some hot key points like mentioning all new introductions, reviews, reports from events like PMA and Photokina, sharing some impressive and creative photos and Mark's sole perspective of his feeling about this fascinating world of Digital Imaging. Mark is based in the UK, but his eagle-eye focuses global.
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