Olympus Superzoom 110 – Deceptively Capable
Control.
I’ve never got on overly well with point and shoot cameras. That ease of use is generally coupled with lack of control over the final image, and that is not my style of photography. This is the first point and shoot whose limitations felt unrestrictive.
Modes.
If you want to dive further into the modes, hold down the menu button, and scroll you can flick through the following:
• Spot – essentially a focus and exposure lock mode. Centre the viewfinder point on your subject, half press, and your exposure and focus is locked. Great for playing with depth of field without needing your subject to be in the centre of the frame.
• Auto-zoom – Auto zooms to create a head and shoulder portrait. I’m not sure why you wouldn’t simply use the manual zoom buttons, but it’s there if you want to use it.
• Night scene – This allows the shutter speed to slow down to as much as a 2-second-long exposure. If you combine it with either no flash, or a fill flash, you can get surprisingly well exposed night shots.
• AF-P – A somewhat limited predictive auto focus mode, keep the focus point on an approaching subject, and the camera will attempt to predict the movement.
• Infinity – locks the focus to infinity, useful for landscape photography. I didn’t find that the auto focus got confused with landscapes, but it’s nice to be certain you are focusing at infinity.
Get Close.
The viewfinder features two LEDs, an orange and a green one. The orange light is related to the flash, and the green is the focus. If they light on a shutter half push, then the camera is ready to go, if they flash, there is an issue. This is especially useful when you are at the shorter end of the cameras focusing range. Thanks to the minimum focus range of 60cm, I didn’t often have to back off of my chosen subject.
Balanced.
Every camera has its trade-offs. Price versus quality, usability versus capability. The Superzoom is no exception, but it does do a good job of staying on the right side of that line. The controls aren’t a pleasure to use, but they don’t hold you back. The internal mechanisms are quiet and produce good results, and the feature set allows for a surprising amount of user input.
If you’d like to own this particular camera, head on over to the camera store.