First Impressions
Although we still have some reservations about the Coolpix A - specifically its relatively slow maximum aperture and high price tag - its reasonably fast focusing and sensible level of customization helped make it pretty enjoyable to use.
Adjusting anything through the camera's interactive control screen requires rather a lot of button pressing (you can't use the control dial to scroll around the screen or to scroll through the options of the currently highlighted setting) but considered customization of the camera's two function buttons puts your most-used features at your fingertips. And, pleasantly, if you've assigned a function with multiple settings to either of the buttons, you can hold it down and spin the dial to jump to your desired setting.
The camera's Auto ISO works much like that on previous generations of Nikon's DSLRs - you can set the upper limit and the shutter speed at which it'll push the ISO up (anywhere from 1 - 1/1000th sec in third stops), which makes perfect sense for a camera with a prime lens. We used 1/30th though it's tempting to bump this up a bit to reduce the risk of subject movement or shaking the unstabilized lens.
Auto ISO is available in combination with Manual exposure mode, but you can't adjust exposure compensation at this point, which will disappoint some shooters.
The system worked well enough for our shooting needs that we were able to re-dedicate the ISO/Fn2 button to control Active D-Lighting, leaving the front button to act as AEL. Slightly unexpectedly this led us to discover that you can't make any adjustments to exposure when AEL is active - we're used to being able to change aperture and retain the same exposure value or compensate up or down from the locked value.
At first look the JPEGs seem consistent with the company's DSLRs, both in terms of color and sharpening. and the retractable lens made it more pocketable than its obvious peers, such as Fujifilm's X100S or Sigma's DP Merrill series cameras.
Samples Gallery
There are 21 images in our samples gallery. Please do not reproduce any of these images on a website or any newsletter / magazine without prior permission (see our copyright page). We make the originals available for private users to download to their own machines for personal examination or printing (in conjunction with this review), we do so in good faith, please don't abuse it.
Unless otherwise noted images taken with no particular settings at full resolution. Because our review images are now hosted on the 'galleries' section of dpreview.com, you can enjoy all of the new galleries functionality when browsing these samples.
Nikon Coolpix A Preview Samples
| Nikon Coolpix A preview samples gallery - Posted on April 3rd 2013 |
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