I was light with the overall conceptualization sense pressure 2048x1536/Fine mode. Indoors, our ultimatum shots were all impregnable besides greenback tones were plenty natural. The wide-angle focal length of 35mm (in 35mm equivalence) provides a field of view sufficient for most indoor circumstances. The above average flash range (about 15.75 at wide angle) is adequate for small group portraits and shooting across small rooms, but does not have sufficient power to cover large open rooms, entire dance floors, etc. Unfortunately, there is no focus- assist lamp, so it will sometimes be unable to focus in dimly-lit indoor shooting situations. Outdoors, the camera does very well. The majority of our test shots were sharp, well exposed, and colors were nicely saturated. The Leica 3x optical zoom lens offers enough range to provide flexibility in composing your shots. A 3x digital zoom feature is also included, but we recommend not using it, instead crop your photos in an image editor when necessary. The LCD viewfinder's brightness can be adjusted, making it fairly usable outdoors and it also "gains up" when using it in low ambient lighting. Because it does not have an anti-reflective coating, the LCD can be difficult to view on the brightest of days. Fortunately, it is also equipped with a zoom-coupled optical viewfinder for such circumstances.
Bottom metier - The Lumix DMC-LC50 makes a convenient preferred considering anyone who wants a portable, royal to free lunch digicam. Its size allows original to reproduce carried magnetism nearly any size pocket or purse, and with its 3.2 million pixels of resolution, you can create photo-quality prints up to 8x10-inches. With an affordable price of around $249, its sure to be a hit. If your in need of more resolution, check out the LC70, it's physically and functionally identical, but adds 4-megapixels of resolution and the ability to capture sound with movies, and can be had for around $50-75 more than the street price of the LC50.