Canon SX40HS
It’s never been easier to shoot videos with a PowerShot digital camera. Canon SX40HS has a dedicated movie button that lets you start and stop recording instantly. There is no need to go through layers of menus or operate switches or dials to switch to and from video recording mode. The camera is always ready to shoot stills or video whenever you want. Canon SX40HS also incorporates an electronic wind filter, which suppresses wind noise that can muffle or distort the sound. Canon Powershot SX40 HS And unlike less sophisticated point-and-shoot cameras, the PowerShot SX40 HS lets you use the full range of optical zoom when you’re shooting a video
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Canon SX40HS
The PowerShot SX40 HS features a convenient and highly useful 2.7-inch Vari-Angle LCD screen that swivels out almost a full 180 degrees. Canon SX40HS It also rotates through approximately 270 degrees, letting you tilt itCanon PowerShot SX20 HS at Amazon.com up or down to shoot at low or high angles. Canon Powershot SX40 HS You can compose freely even when shooting from difficult vantage points and use the full range of angle adjustment even when the camera is mounted on a tripod. Canon SX40HS You can even rotate the LCD facing forward to capture perfectly framed self-portraits and to join group shots. Canon Powershot SX40 HS The PureColor System LCD screen has 230,000 dots, giving you a crisp, clear picture to make shooting, playback and using the camera’s menu functions especially convenient.
Canon Powershot SX40 HS The latest advance in Canon Optical Image Stabilization technology, Intelligent IS analyzes camera movement and applies the best shake correction method for the shooting situation. For stills, the system automatically selects among Normal, Panning, Macro (Hybrid) and Tripod IS modes. When shooting video, the system automatically selects among Dynamic, Powered, Macro and Tripod IS modes. Canon SX40HS With Intelligent IS, you can concentrate on image capture, letting the camera make the most effective IS settings to assure the steadiest possible image. I don’t. I want portability, not super zoom. So I bought an S95 and have used it the past year. Got this cam for the 10 percent of shots I thought I wasn’t getting with the S95 and guess what? I’m still not getting them because the SX40 doesn’t fit in my pocket.
Canon Powershot SX40 HS
If I want to carry a bulky camera I’ll haul out the T2i. A point and shoot should not be this big. Now, if you are only going to have one camera and you absolutely have to have the biggest zoom in a point and shoot…you’ve found it. This thing’s a long-ranger. It gives you standard barrel distortion that Canon mostly removes via in-camera processing. Canon Powershot SX40 HS Its controls are more frustrating than the S95. To get basic parameter changes I have to drill into menus. The S95 has enough tactile control to make adjustments faster for less fiddling when you want to be getting the shot. But it has a “framing zoom only.” I like that. You may hate it. But if I see a distant subject I want to photograph, I GO OVER THERE. You will always get better detail than if you just point a long zoom at it. I realize there are shots I’m not going to get, particularly of wildlife or over water or from a distant lookout or whatever.
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But honestly that’s not the kind of shot I pursue anyway. I like the funky stage-lit concert shot at House of Blues when I’m close enough to get a full-length lead singer portrait in mid-kick. The red barn against the blue sky. The inside of a candlelit rustic restaurant in the inn built in the 1700s. The S95, with its f/2.0 lens, flat out blows the SX40 into the weeds for the kind of color and light I love. I think I’ll list my new SX40 on ebay and see how the new S100 is. I hear they put a built-in ND filter on this one. Same sensor as the SX40, faster lens. What’s not to like? Yes, I’ll still miss those superzoom shots. But since I don’t take superzoom shots anyway, no loss for me. I gain it back tenfold in image quality, especially in low light. Canon SX40HS And best of all, the camera is always with me so when an interesting image presents itself, I have the tool to make the photograph right in my pocket.

