Last year Fuji boasted of its compacts’ ability to take pictures in low-light
conditions where most others would struggle, and we suitably rewarded the F20
and F30.
This year, like a number of rivals, it’s playing the ‘face detection’ card;
hence those letters after the model number.
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What this means in practice is that the solid-feel, metal construction
F31fd
automatically zeroes focus in on a human face to ensure better portraits, though
results are no better or worse than most snapshots.
The camera also follows the F30’s lead with manually adjustable light
sensitivity up to ISO3200 – that’s better than some digital SLRs – plus a
6.3-megapixel resolution. A standard 3x optical zoom and a battery life allowing
a generous 580 shots cement the impression of a reliable all-rounder.
The
Fujifilm
Finepix F31fd, more conventionally styled than many digital compacts of
late, powers up in just over a second – the lens barrel veritably flying out of
its storage position slightly proud of the body. The
2.5in
screen bursts into life for shot composition and review in the absence of an
optical viewfinder.
A shooting mode wheel between the power and shutter buttons atop the camera
provides key options at a flick of a fingernail, while the sparingly placed
controls ranged alongside the monitor will be familiar to any Fuji owner.
These include the ‘F’ (for ‘Photo’) mode button, which calls up a handful of
key options – resolution, colour effects, and ISO settings (when switching to
manual) – allowing quick adjustment without having to wade through menu screens.
Controls are uniformly responsive and well placed. Our only quibbles are that
the mode wheel could be firmer to the touch, so as to prevent it slipping on to
an adjacent setting, and that bright sunlight renders the screen almost
invisible.
Under ideal conditions, photos are colourful if ever so slightly soft
straight out of the camera. And, though opting for the top ISO3200 setting in
low light when you want to avoid the bleaching effect of flash introduces the
bugbear of image noise – tiny, grain-like speckles – the F31fd produces results
that are both usable and better the performance of some rivals at ISO800.
Close ups also fair particularly well. There was no removable media supplied
with our review sample however, so budget extra for an xD-Picture Card so you
can get snapping out of the box.
Though the
face-detection
feature is more gimmick than essential, the
Fujifilm
F31fd is one of the most impressively constructed compacts outside of
Canon’s Digital IXUS
range. You may be paying around £50 more than competitors with a similar
resolution, but pixel count’s not everything and here we feel it is money well
spent.
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