
Canon PowerShot S95 review: Canon PowerShot S95
The PowerShot S95 is an excellent compact camera that will complement any photographer's arsenal, provided you don't need super-fast performance specs.
There's an increasing demand for small cameras with manual controls, a demand fuelled by amateur photographers looking for a go-everywhere replacement for their digital SLR. Panasonic has had such a camera for a few years with the Lumix LX3, and its replacement the Lumix LX5, and last year Canon answered back with the PowerShot S90, which features manual controls and a wide, bright f/2 maximum aperture.
The Good
The Bad
The Bottom Line
While we really liked the S90, there were a few issues that this camera needed to resolve before making it a real contender for the crown. Enter the S95, then.
Design and features
One of the perennial complaints about the S90 was its tendency to slip out of the hand due to its polished surface. The S95 gains a textured exterior that helps allay any fears of accidentally smashing a $600 piece of kit to smithereens.
Like the S90 before it, this camera features a rotating ring around the front of the lens that can be configured to change a number of shooting parameters, such as ISO, white balance and manual focus control. The button on top of the camera, labelled Ring Func., changes the parameter. A bright 3-inch LCD screen sits at the back of the camera; its resolution is 461,000 dots, but in use it's bright and very precise when reviewing.
Lens specifications are the same as the S90; 3.8x optical zoom with an f/2-4.9 maximum aperture. There again is the annoyingly placed pop-up flash that rises underneath your finger when the camera is held normally.
The biggest gain that the S95 has over the previous model is HD video recording (720p) at 24fps with stereo audio. While there's no manual control for movie mode, white balance and colour mode adjustments are available. The S95 also adds Canon's new Hybrid IS technology, which corrects camera shake from a number of different directions thanks to a built-in accelerometer.
Seasoned photographers will value the bracketing options: HDR-ready, which takes three shots at different exposures; and focus bracket, which takes three shots at different focal distances. Connectivity is taken care of via mini HDMI and mini USB ports. Note there's also an automatic HDR mode accessible from the scene mode menu.
Compared to
Here's how the S95 stacks up against these other do-it-all cameras:

Canon PowerShot S95 | Nikon Coolpix P300 | Olympus XZ-1 | Panasonic LX5 |
---|---|---|---|
10-megapixel CCD sensor (1/1.7-inch) | 12.2-megapixel backlit CMOS sensor (1/2.3-inch) | 10-megapixel CCD sensor (1/1.63-inch) | 10-megapixel CCD sensor (1/1.63-inch) |
3-inch, 461,000-dot LCD | 3-inch, 920,000-dot LCD | 3-inch, 610,000-dot OLED | 3-inch, 460,000-dot LCD |
3.8x optical zoom, 28mm wide-angle | 4.2x optical zoom, 24mm wide-angle | 4x optical zoom, 28mm wide-angle | 3.8x optical zoom, 24mm wide-angle |
HD video (H.264, 720p, 24fps) | Full HD video (H.264, 1080p, 30fps) | HD video (Motion JPEG, 720p, 30fps) | HD video (AVCHD Lite, 720p, 30fps) |
Pop-up flash | Pop-up flash | Pop-up flash | Pop-up flash |
Performance
Canon rates the battery of the S95 at 200 shots, 20 less than the S90.
Image quality
The S90's big strength was its image quality, and the S95 consistently matches it beat-for-beat. Colour rendition is accurate with particularly strong blues and greens. The camera seems to cope well with difficult exposures even in automatic mode, choosing to under- or overexpose using the exposure compensation accordingly.
Images are clean and mostly noise-free up to ISO 400, though there is some digital processing visible on JPEG shots. The image stabilisation system does do well at slow shutter speeds, but it can't compensate entirely for shaky hands or low-light use without a tripod.
Like the S90, the S95 is very competent with macro shots and the lens sharpness is very impressive, capturing clear detail across the frame.
Consistent sharpness from the S95's lens. 100 per cent crop inset. (Credit: CBSi)
Video quality is really very impressive for a compact of this class. They're stored as MOV files in H.264 and while there's no external mic input, the sound quality is up there with the best we've seen on this type of camera. There is no optical zoom during filming, though.
Image samples
Click each image below for JPEGs straight from the S95. No post-processing has been done to alter these photos.
Exposure: 1/100, f/4, ISO 160 | Exposure: 1/125, f/3.2, ISO 250 |
Exposure: 1/50, f/2.8, ISO 80, -0.7EV | Exposure: 1/800, f/4, ISO 200 |
Exposure: 1/50, f/2.8, ISO 500 | Exposure: 1/30, f/2, ISO 800 |
Conclusion
The PowerShot S95 is an excellent compact camera that will complement any photographer's arsenal, provided you don't need super-fast performance specs.