Panasonic Lumix GF6 Review
Introduction
The Panasonic Lumix GF6 is a new small, stylish and cutting-edge compact system camera. The GF6 features a Four Thirds-sized 16 megapixel Live MOS image sensor, Venus Engine processor (the same as that of the range-topping GH3), Light Speed AF system, a hinged touch-sensitive LCD screen which can be rotated by 180°, built-in pop-up flash, integrated Wi-Fi and NFC connectivity, Full HD video recording, 19 Creative Effects and a Creative Panorama mode, stop-motion animations, a Clear Retouch function that allows users to clone out unwanted elements from a photo in-camera, RAW support and an expanded ISO range of 160-25600. The Panasonic GF6 is available in black/silver or white in a kit with the standard Lumix G Vario 14-42mm F3.5-5.6 lens for £499 / $599, and £649 in a double-zoom kit with the 45-150mm Mega O.I.S. telephoto lens.
Ease of Use
The Panasonic Lumix GF6 is very similar in outward appearance to the previous GF5 model that it replaces. It's just a little bit larger at 111.2 x 64.8 x 38.4 mm and heavier at 280g without a lens attached or battery inserted. With a pancake lens like Panasonic’s own 14mm f/2.5 optic fitted, the GF6 is about the same size as a typical fixed-lens compact camera, even though it boasts a much bigger sensor. The GF6 actually ships as standard with the Lumix G Vario 14-42mm F3.5-5.6 lens, which is still small but stops the camera from being pocketable.
The main changes versus the previous GF5 include a less bulbous flash housing, addition of a shooting mode dial on top, the 180 degree tilting screen, and a second Function / Wi-Fi button on the rear. Otherwise the GF6 is very similar to its predecessor. The built-in Wi-Fi functionaility (IEEE 802.11 b/g/n) lets you use your smartphone or mobile device to remotely change the camera settings (focus setting, exposure compensation, ISO, WB and Photo Styles) using the LUMIX App. You can even fire the shutter button remotely, while the auto transfer function automatically backs up your photos onto a tablet, smartphone, PC, web service, AV device or Panasonic's LUMIX Club Cloud Sync service. The GF6 is also one of the first compact system cameras to feature NFC (Near Field Communication) technology (the same technology that's used for mobile payments), which allows you to connect it to a compatible internet enabled device or another NFC-enabled camera by simply tapping them together.
The mechanical button on the top/rear for the GF6's pop-up flash has been retained, with all the top-mounted controls - including the shutter release, one-touch movie record button, power switch and dedicated intelligent Auto button - grouped tightly together on the right-hand side of the top-plate. There are dual holes on the left of the top-plate for the stereo mic, alongside the built-in speaker.
The GF6 has a rather small but tactile textured vertical area on the front-right of the body which acts as a handgrip, allowing you to hold the camera with two fingers whilst operating the shutter button with your forefinger. This works in tandem with the slim rubberized thumb-rest on the rear. The GF6 sports a design characterised by clean lines, gentle curves and a polished exterior and is extremely well-built despite its entry-level price-point, with a high quality aluminum body, lens mount, and tripod socket, although most of the buttons are made from plastic, as is the mount on the kit lens.
Just like the GF1, GF2, GF3 and GF5 before it, the GF6 doesn't have a built-in viewfinder, with just the LCD screen on the rear providing a solution for composing your images. A more important consideration is the GF6's complete lack of an external hotshoe, which prevents the use of an optical viewfinder accessory. This inability to hold the camera up to your eye makes it very difficult to hand-hold the camera to compose using the LCD screen and still get sharp results using longer focal lengths. As the ability to use different lenses is one of the main selling points of a system camera, the lack of any eye-level finder, optical or electronic, is rather limiting.
The Micro Four Thirds system is now very well-established, with a wide variety of lenses on offer from Panasonic and Olympus that cover most of the popular focal lengths. You can also use regular Four Thirds lenses or even Leica D lenses via optional adapters from either Panasonic or third-parties, but lenses that are not compatible with the GF6's Contrast AF function can only be used with manual focusing and cannot use the Tracking AF, AFc (Auto Focus Continuous) or Continuous AF functions.
Optical image stabilisation on all Pansonic compact system cameras is supplied via the lens, rather than being built-in to the camera body, a key difference between the Panasonic and Olympus systems. Note that the 14-42mm kit lens does offer image stabilisation, but it's turned on and off via main menu system rather than a physical switch on the lens barrel, with three different modes accessible through the GF6's menu system.
Front | Rear |
When enabled, the Panasonic Lumix GF6 automatically compensates for camera shake, which is a slight blurring of the image that typically occurs at slow shutter speeds when the camera is hand held. There are three different modes, Mode 1 is on all the time including image composition, Mode 2 is only on when you press the shutter button, and Mode 3 compensates for up and down movements only (which in turn allows you to pan the camera).
On the front of the Panasonic Lumix GF6 is a small focus-assist and self-timer indicator lamp, lens release button, lens mount and the already mentioned hand-grip. On the bottom is a metal tripod socket, importantly in-line with the middle of the lens barrel, and the shared battery compartment and SD/SDHC/SDXC memory card slot. The GF6 manages just over 325 shots using the supplied DMW-BLE10E 7.2V 1025mAh rechargeable Li-ion battery.
On the right-hand side are ports for the HDMI and AV Out/Digital connections, with protruding metal eyelets on either side of the body for the supplied camera strap. Unfortunately, Panasonic don't include a HDMI cable as standard in the box, which means that you'll have to purchase one separately to take advantage of this camera's HD connectivity. On the left of the camera is the NFC logo.
The top of the GF6 has a microphone, stereo speakers, cleverly designed built-in pop-up flash, dedicated button for the Intelligent Auto mode which lights blue when turned on, tactile shutter button, on/off switch, and a one-touch movie button. The Panasonic GF6 has a dedicated button for opening the cleverly designed pop-up flash on the rear. Given the small size of the GF6, fitting a built-in flash was no mean feat, as proven by the double-hinged design which is quite a technical achievement. Although not particularly powerful with a guide number of just 6.3, the GF6's flash is perfectly adequate for fill-in effects at close-quarters.
New to the GF6 is a dedicated shooting mode dial, something that we missed having on the previous model. The usual selection of Program, Aperture Priority, Shutter Priority, and Manual are available for the more experienced photographers. An optional exposure meter can be displayed in the P/A/S/M shooting modes which graphically shows the relationship between shutter speed and aperture, with a color-coded warning that alerts users when the settings are not in the proper range. The more beginner-friendly Scene modes (over 20 available, all with fairly helpful on-screen explanations) and Intelligent Auto are also accessed via the shooting mode dial. One scene mode particularly worthy of mention is the Peripheral Defocus option, which makes it easy for beginners to achieve a blurred background / sharp subject effect without having to understand what apertures are. Additionally there are two Custom modes which allow you to configure your favourite camera settings and quickly access them.
The GF6's range of Creative Controls, denoted by an artist's palette, has been further expanded from 14 options to 19 on the GF6 - you can see examples on the Image Quality page. You can also fine-tune each effect via a series of simple on-screen sliders for color, saturation and contrast, complete with a real-time preview of your changes. The camera even provides filter recommendations and on-screen scene guides.
Accessed via the dedicated red iA button on top of the camera, Intelligent Auto mode tries to make things as easy as possible for the complete beginner. It allows you to point and shoot the camera without having to worry about choosing the right scene mode or settings. Intelligent Auto Mode automatically determines a number of key criteria when taking a picture, including selecting the most appropriate scene mode (from 5 commonly used presets) and ISO speed, and turning face detection (up to 15 faces), image stabilization and quick auto-focus on.
The Intelligent Auto Plus Mode also includes Intelligent Exposure, which increases exposure only in the under-exposed areas of the image, Digital Red-eye, which automatically detects and removes red-eye, and AF Tracking, which continually tracks a moving subject and keeps it in focus, without you having to hold the shutter button halfway down as on most other cameras.
Tilting LCD Screen |
Top |
The Intelligent Resolution mode makes a standard image look like a higher resolution one by processing the contour areas, texture areas and smooth areas individually. There are three available strengths - low, standard and high - and an Extended option which increase the zoom range. Despite all the clever behind-the-scenes processing, it's fairly easy to tell which image was taken with Intelligent Resolution turned on and which one with it turned off due to unwanted artifacts appearing, particularly if viewing onscreen at 100% magnification. While the difference isn't quite so apparent on a print up to A3 in size, we're not convinced enough to recommend regularly using it.
Intelligent Dynamic adjusts the exposure setting to record more detail in the highlights and shadows, with three strengths available - low, standard and high. It's actually very effective for high-contrast scenes when the camera tends to blow-out the highlights and block-up the shadows. New to the GF6 is the HDR mode, which combines 3 frames taken at different exposures to create a single image with increased dynamic range, while the Panorama mode allows you to take panoramic images very easily by 'sweeping' with the camera and even apply creative effects.
The GF6 offers 1080i HD 1920 x 1080 movies and 720p HD 1280 x 720 movies at 60/50fps (NTSC/PAL) in the AVCHD (MPEG-4/H.264) format. In addition it can also record MP4 movies at 1080p HD 1920x1080, 720p 1280x720 and VGA 640x480 pixels at 30/25fps, useful as this format can currently be shared more easily. AVCHD offers almost double the recording time in HD quality, but software support is a little thin on the ground. Panasonic describe it as the best mode for playing back on a HD TV direct from the camera, with the newly-supported MP4 format best for email and playing on a computer.
There's also a useful wind cut function which blocks out most of the noise from background wind. The thumb-operated dedicated movie button on the top makes it simple to start record video footage at whatever quality level is currently selected. The HDMI port allows you to connect the GF6 to a high-def TV set, but only if you purchase the optional HDMI mini-cable. You can extract a frame from a movie during playback and save it as a small still image.
The Panasonic GF6's Intelligent Auto mode works for movies as well as for still photos. Simply press the iA button on top of the camera, then the Movie Record button. The Intelligent Scene Selector automatically determines the most suitable Scene mode from five options - Portrait, Scenery, Low Light and Close-up or Normal modes. Face Detection automatically detects a face in the frame and adjusts the focus, exposure, contrast, and skin complexion. Intelligent Exposure continually checks the ambient light level and adjusts the exposure setting as conditions change to prevent blown highlights and blocked shadows. The Optical Image Stabilizer helps prevent blurring from hand-shake when using a compatible lens.
You can use any zoom lens during recording with focusing set as for still images. On the negative side, you'll find that if you choose continuous auto-focus, areas of the video will be blurred before becoming sharp again as the camera tries to refocus. On a more positive note, the the GF6 is quite fast at re-focusing (although not as fast as for still images), and having this system is much better than not being able to auto-focus at all, as with most current DSLR cameras that offer video recording. Hand-holding the GF6 during movie recording inevitably leads to obvious shake, despite the optical image stabilizer on compatible lenses, so for best results you'll need a dedicated video tripod. One great benefit of the touch-screen control system is that Touch Auto Focusing is available in movie recording, enabling pro-level rack-like focusing simply by pointing at the subject on the LCD screen.
The new Creative Movie shooting mode, accessed via the mode dial on top of the GF6, allows you to set the shutter speed, aperture or both settings manually during recording (a Program option is also available). Changing the shutter speed is especially suitable for shooting fast-moving subjects, whilst the ability to control the aperture is convenient when there are several subjects at different distances. In practice this system works well, allowing some really creative effects, but there are a couple of drawbacks. Firstly the operating sound of the control dials is very audible in the movie, so you'll need to edit the soundtrack later to remove it or use the new Silent Operation mode which operates the zoom, aperture, shutter speed, exposure compensation, ISO sensitivity and mic level adjustments via the touch-screen. Secondly, you can't set the shutter speed to below 1/25th second, instantly ruling out more creative slow shutter-speed effects.
The rear of the Panasonic GF6 is dominated by the large 3 inch LCD screen. The 920K pixel, high-resolution screen coped admirably with the majority of lighting conditions, aided by an anti-reflective coating. This screen is a great improvement on cameras with the usual 230K dot resolution, even being nice to use in low-light. The LCD operates at 60fps, twice the usual speed, which helps make it relatively flicker-free. The Auto Power LCD function automatically detects the current lighting conditions and boosts the LCD backlighting by up to 40% when shooting outdoors in bright sunshine, helping to keep the screen visible, although the lack of an optical viewfinder is a hindrance on the rare occasions that the rear LCD is difficult to see.
Front | Tilting LCD Screen |
The screen now tilts through 180 degrees, which allows you to hold the camera at arms length and see yourself in the monitor, making self-portraits using the dedicated Self Shot shooting mode much easier. The hinged, tilting screen is also very useful for overhead shots and as a waist-level viewfinder for more candid shots. It doesn't add too much extra bulk to the overall design of the GF6, and is one of the principal upgrades over the previous model.
One of the GF6's main innovations is its touchscreen interface, with an attractive user interface that's easy on the eye. Panasonic have wisely restricted the amount of things that you can do by interacting with the screen, and indeed you can still operate most things on the camera without having to push and prod the LCD at all. But you would be missing out on a lot of genuinely useful functionality that really improves the shooting experience.
The most immediately noticeable function is the ability to use the 1-area AF mode to focus on your main subject simply by touching it on the LCD. If the subject then moves, the GF6 cleverly follows it around the screen using the the AF tracking function. If the subject exits the frame entirely, simply recompose and tap it again to start focusing. Impressive stuff that makes focusing on off-center subjects fast and intuitive. It is a little too easy to accidentally press the screen and set the focus point to the wrong area for the current subject, but a press of the Quick Menu button will center the AF point (or you can turn this feature off altogether).
The size of the AF point itself can also be changed via an interactive onscreen slider or the rear scroll wheel. If Face Detection is enabled, the 1-area AF point can be manually set to a person's eye to help ensure that the most important part of a portrait is in focus. If Multi-area AF rather than 1-area AF is enabled, then you can select a group of 4, 5 or 6 AF points from 9 different areas, again providing some manual control over what is traditionally a rather hit and miss affair. The Pinpoint AF auto-focus area mode allows you to touch the area of the frame where your subject is, whereupon said area gets magnified in order to allow you to set the focus point with pinpoint accuracy using a second touch. While this method is obviously slower than the others, it can be very useful when shooting, say, a portrait with shallow depth of field where you will want to make sure focus is on the subject’s eyes rather than her nose, ears or eyebrows.
When Intelligent Auto is switched on, the GF6 changes the scene mode used when you touch the subject, for example selecting portrait mode if you touch a face and macro mode if you touch a close-up flower. If you prefer to manually focus rather than use the very responsive auto-focus system, you can magnify any part of the subject by 1x, 5x or 10x by simply dragging the image around the screen. The final touchscreen ability from an image composition point of view is the ability to release the shutter, with a small icon on the right hand screen enabling this functionality, and then a single on-screen tap all that's required to take the picture.
All of the menu options can be now changed via the touchscreen interface. You can also control image playback by touching the screen, with the ability to tap a thumbnail to see the full-size version, scroll through your images by dragging them from side to side, and magnifying them up to 16x.
To the right of the LCD screen is a simplified control layout, with a self-explanatory Playback button and a Display button at the top, which toggles detailed settings information about each picture on and off, such as the ISO rating and aperture / shutter speed. There's also a small brightness histogram available during shooting and RGBY histogram during playback if enabled in the menu and you can also turn on guide-lines to help with composition and flashing highlights which indicate any over-exposed areas of the image.
Memory Card Slot | Battery Compartment |
Underneath those two buttons is a traditional 4-way navigation D-Pad system with Menu/Set button in the centre. Pressing left, up, right and down on the D-Pad buttons selects AF Mode, Exposure Compensation, White Balance and Burst / Self-timer options respectively.
Underneath is a combined Q. Menu/Fn1/Delete/Reset button which provides quick access to most of the principal controls via an onscreen menu. Depending on the current shooting mode, this displays up to 13 options that can all be changed via the touch-screen. You can also configure it to include up to 10 out of 19 available settings simply by dragging and dropping the onscreen icons. You can still access all of these options from the main menu system too if you wish.
A circular scroll wheel surrounds the GF6's D-Pad. This wheel is used for, amongst other things, changing the aperture and shutter speed by turning from left to right and back again. This is a common feature found on other high-end compacts and entry-level DSLR cameras, so you'll be right at home if you've used a DSLR before - more basic compact camera users will need to get used to using this wheel.
The main menu system on the GF6 is straight-forward to use and is accessed by pressing the Menu/Set button in the middle of the navigation D-Pad. There are five main menus represented by large icons, Record, Motion Picture, Custom, Setup and Playback. As an indication of how configurable the GF6 is, the Custom menu has 29 different options, allowing you to fine-tune this camera to suit your way of working. If you have never used a digital camera before, or you're upgrading from a more basic model, reading the easy-to-follow manual before you start is a good idea. Unfortunately Panasonic have only chosen to supply a basic guide in printed format, with the full manual only available as a PDF on the product CD.
Unlike a conventional DSLR camera which uses a phase detection auto-focus system, the GF6 employs the same Contrast AF that is commonly used by compact cameras. Panasonic have published marketing data which suggests that the GF6's Light Speed AF system is as fast, if not faster, than a typical DSLR camera's, with a claimed speed of just 0.09 second when used with certain lenses,. In practice we noticed very little difference in speed between the GF6 and a DSLR, and there were also very few occasions when the GF6 failed to lock onto the subject, especially when using the centre AF point. There are a wide range of AF modes on offer, including multiple-area AF with up to 23 focus areas, 1-area AF with a selectable focus area, Face Detection, AF Tracking and Pinpoint. The GF6 also has a useful Quick AF function that begins focusing as soon as you point the camera.
The start-up time from turning the Lumix GF6 on to being ready to take a photo is very impressive at less than 0.5 seconds. It takes about 1 second to store a JPEG image, allowing you to keep shooting as they are being recorded onto the memory card - there is a barely perceptible LCD blackout between each image. Storing a single RAW image takes around 4 seconds, but thankfully it doesn't lock up the camera in any way - you can use the menu system or shoot another image while the first file is being written to memory. The Panasonic Lumix GF6 has a pretty good Burst mode which enables you to take 4.2 frames per second for an unlimited number of JPEG images at the highest image quality, or 7 RAW images. There is a much faster 20fps option, but it only records Small sized images.
Once you have captured a photo, the Panasonic Lumix GF6 has an average range of options when it comes to playing, reviewing and managing your images. You can instantly scroll through the images that you have taken, view thumbnails (up to 30 onscreen at the same time and in a Calendar view), zoom in and out up to 16x magnification, view slideshows, delete, protect, trim, resize, copy and rotate an image. You can also select favourite images, change an image's aspect ratio, divide a video and set the print order. The new Clear Retouch function quickly and accurately removes any unwanted objects or figures in an image by just tracing over them with your fingertip.
Image Quality
All of the sample images in this review were taken using the 16 megapixel Fine JPEG setting, which gives an average image size of around 7Mb.
The Panasonic Lumix GF6 produced images of excellent quality during the review period. It produces noise-free images at ISO 100 to 800, with limited noise starting to appear at ISO 1600. ISO 3200 exhibits quite visible noise and loss of fine detail, and the faster settings of ISO 6400 and 12800 are even noisier but still usable. The new fastest setting of ISO 25600 looks good on the specifications sheet but awful in reality.
The images were a little soft straight out of the camera at the default sharpening level and ideally require further sharpening in an application like Adobe Photoshop, or you can change the in-camera setting if you don't like the default results. The large number of Creative Controls and Photo Styles allow you to quickly and easily customise the look of the camera's JPEG images. The pop-up flash worked well indoors, with no red-eye and good overall exposure.
The night photograph was excellent, with the maximum shutter speed of 60 seconds allowing you to capture plenty of light. We struggled to see any differences between the Intelligent Resolution settings, but Intelligent D-range is an effective feature for capturing more detail in the shadows and highlights, as is the new HDR mode. The clever Panorama mode allows you to take panoramic images very easily by 'sweeping' with the camera, with the ability to apply one of 15 different creative filters.
Noise
There are 9 ISO settings available on the Panasonic Lumix GF6. Here are some 100% crops which show the noise levels for each ISO setting, with JPEG on the left and RAW on the right:
JPEG |
RAW |
ISO 160 (100% Crop) |
ISO 160 (100% Crop) |
ISO 200 (100% Crop) |
ISO 200 (100% Crop) |
ISO 400 (100% Crop) |
ISO 400 (100% Crop) |
ISO 800 (100% Crop) |
ISO 800 (100% Crop) |
ISO 1600 (100% Crop) |
ISO 1600 (100% Crop) |
ISO 3200 (100% Crop) |
ISO 3200 (100% Crop) |
ISO 6400 (100% Crop) |
ISO 6400 (100% Crop) |
ISO 12800 (100% Crop) |
ISO 12800 (100% Crop) |
ISO 25600 (100% Crop) |
ISO 25600 (100% Crop) |
File Quality
The Panasonic Lumix GF6 has 2 different JPEG image quality settings available, with Fine being the highest quality option. Here are some 100% crops which show the quality of the various options, with the file size shown in brackets.
Fine (7.61Mb) (100% Crop) |
Normal (3.31Mb) (100% Crop) |
RAW (18.8Mb) (100% Crop) |
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Sharpening
Here are two 100% crops which have been Saved as Web - Quality 50 in Photoshop. The right-hand image has had some sharpening applied in Photoshop. The out-of-the camera images are a little soft at the default sharpening setting, and benefit from further sharpening in a program like Adobe Photoshop. You can also change the in-camera sharpening level by tweaking the Photo Styles, with five different settings available.
Original (100% Crop) |
Sharpened (100% Crop) |
Flash
The flash settings on the Panasonic Lumix GF6 are Auto, Auto/Red-eye Reduction, Forced Flash On, Slow Sync./Red-eye Reduction and Forced Flash Off. These shots of a white coloured wall were taken at a distance of 1.5m.
Flash Off (28mm) |
Flash On (28mm) |
Flash Off (84mm) |
Flash On (84mm) |
And here are some portrait shots. As you can see, neither the Flash On setting or the Red-Eye Reduction option caused any amount of red-eye.
Flash On |
Flash On (100% Crop) |
Red-eye Reduction |
Red-eye Reduction (100% Crop) |
Night
The Panasonic Lumix GF6 maximum shutter speed is 60 seconds, which is excellent news if you're seriously interested in night photography. The shot below was taken using a shutter speed of 15 seconds at f/8 at ISO 160. I've included a 100% crop of the image to show what the quality is like. The camera takes the same amount of time again to apply noise reduction, so for example at the 15 second setting the actual exposure takes 30 seconds.
Night |
Night (100% Crop) |
Intelligent Resolution
The Panasonic Lumix GF6's Intelligent Resolution feature identifies outlines, texture areas and soft gradation areas of the image and then automatically optimizes the edges and detailed texture areas while using noise reduction to make the soft gradation areas smoother. There are four available strengths - low, standard, high and extended.
Off |
Low |
Standard |
High |
Extended | |
Intelligent Dynamic
The Panasonic Lumix GF6's Intelligent Dynamic mode adjusts the exposure setting to record more detail in the highlights and shadows, with three strengths available - low, standard and high.
Off |
Low |
Standard |
High |
HDR
In the HDR mode the Panasonic Lumix GF6 combines 3 frames taken at different exposures to create a single image with increased dynamic range.
Off |
On |
Photo Styles
Panasonic's Photo Styles, similar to Nikon's Picture Styles, Canon's Picture Controls and Olympus' Picture Modes, are preset combinations of different sharpness, contrast, saturation and noise reduction settings. The six available Photo Styles are shown below in the following series, which demonstrates the differences. There is also a Custom option so that you can create your own look.
Standard |
Vivid |
Natural |
Monochrome |
Scenery |
Portrait |
Creative Controls
The Panasonic Lumix GF6 has an extensive range of Creative Controls, denoted by an artist's palette on the shooting mode dial, with 19 different options on offer.
Expressive |
Retro |
Old Days |
High Key |
Low Key |
Sepia |
Dynamic Monochrome |
Impressive Art |
High Dynamic |
Cross Process |
Toy Effect |
Toy Pop |
Bleach Bypass |
Miniature Effect |
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Panorama
The Panasonic Lumix GF6 allows you to take panoramic images very easily by 'sweeping' with the camera. The camera does all the processing and stitching. In addition 15 of the Creative Filter effects can also be applied to panorama shots in the Creative Panorama mode.
Panorama |
Panorama with the Dynamic Monochrome Filter |
Sample Images
This is a selection of sample images from the Panasonic Lumix GF6 camera, which were all taken using the 16 megapixel Fine JPEG setting. The thumbnails below link to the full-sized versions, which have not been altered in any way.
1/10s · f/5.6 · ISO 160
28mm
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1/13s · f/5.6 · ISO 200
28mm
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1/25s · f/5.6 · ISO 400
28mm
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1/50s · f/5.6 · ISO 800
28mm
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1/100s · f/5.6 · ISO 1600
28mm
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1/200s · f/5.6 · ISO 3200
28mm
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1/400s · f/5.6 · ISO 6400
28mm
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1/800s · f/5.6 · ISO 12800
28mm
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1/1600s · f/5.6 · ISO 25600
28mm
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1/60s · f/3.5 · ISO 250
28mm
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1/80s · f/5.6 · ISO 1000
84mm
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1/60s · f/11 · ISO 2500
28mm
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1/60s · f/4 · ISO 250
28mm
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1/800s · f/5.4 · ISO 160
58mm
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1/60s · f/8 · ISO 1250
28mm
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1/80s · f/8 · ISO 1250
84mm
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1/60s · f/5.6 · ISO 250
28mm
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1/80s · f/5.6 · ISO 2000
84mm
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1/80s · f/5.6 · ISO 2000
84mm
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1/60s · f/5.6 · ISO 640
28mm
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1/200s · f/11 · ISO 160
28mm
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1/100s · f/5.6 · ISO 160
38mm
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1/400s · f/5.6 · ISO 160
84mm
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1/320s · f/5.6 · ISO 160
84mm
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1/800s · f/5.6 · ISO 160
84mm
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1/2000s · f/3.5 · ISO 160
28mm
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1/160s · f/8 · ISO 160
28mm
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1/80s · f/5.6 · ISO 320
84mm
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1/80s · f/5.6 · ISO 200
84mm
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1/60s · f/8 · ISO 400
28mm
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1/60s · f/8 · ISO 320
52mm
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1/400s · f/8 · ISO 160
52mm
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1/250s · f/6.3 · ISO 160
34mm
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1/200s · f/6.3 · ISO 160
28mm
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1/125s · f/8 · ISO 160
36mm
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1/160s · f/8 · ISO 160
28mm
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1/320s · f/8 · ISO 160
84mm
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1/800s · f/5.6 · ISO 160
84mm
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1/160s · f/11 · ISO 160
28mm
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1/500s · f/7.1 · ISO 160
28mm
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1/400s · f/7.1 · ISO 160
30mm
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1/400s · f/7.1 · ISO 160
84mm
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1/80s · f/11 · ISO 160
28mm
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1/100s · f/10 · ISO 160
84mm
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1/3200s · f/3.5 · ISO 160
28mm
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1/320s · f/5.6 · ISO 160
84mm
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1/400s · f/8 · ISO 160
28mm
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1/250s · f/8 · ISO 160
84mm
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1/125s · f/8 · ISO 160
28mm
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1/125s · f/8 · ISO 160
28mm
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1/160s · f/8 · ISO 160
28mm
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1/2000s · f/8 · ISO 12800
28mm
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1/80s · f/8 · ISO 250
84mm
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1/160s · f/8 · ISO 160
28mm
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1/160s · f/8 · ISO 6400
28mm
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1/80s · f/8 · ISO 3200
28mm
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1/80s · f/8 · ISO 160
28mm
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1/400s · f/8 · ISO 160
28mm
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1/60s · f/8 · ISO 160
28mm
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Sample RAW Images
The Panasonic Lumix GF6 enables users to capture RAW and JPEG format files. We've provided some Panasonic RAW (RW2) samples for you to download (thumbnail images shown below are not 100% representative).
1/10s · f/5.6 · ISO 160
28mm
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1/13s · f/5.6 · ISO 200
28mm
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1/25s · f/5.6 · ISO 400
28mm
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1/50s · f/5.6 · ISO 800
28mm
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1/100s · f/5.6 · ISO 1600
28mm
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1/200s · f/5.6 · ISO 3200
28mm
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1/400s · f/5.6 · ISO 6400
28mm
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1/800s · f/5.6 · ISO 12800
28mm
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1/1600s · f/5.6 · ISO 25600
28mm
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1/400s · f/5.6 · ISO 160
84mm
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1/80s · f/5.6 · ISO 200
84mm
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1/60s · f/8 · ISO 400
28mm
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1/800s · f/5.6 · ISO 160
84mm
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1/100s · f/10 · ISO 160
84mm
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1/400s · f/8 · ISO 160
28mm
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1/160s · f/8 · ISO 160
28mm
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1/2000s · f/8 · ISO 12800
28mm
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1/160s · f/8 · ISO 6400
28mm
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1/80s · f/8 · ISO 3200
28mm
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1/80s · f/8 · ISO 160
28mm
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Sample Movie & Video
This is a sample movie at the highest quality setting of 1920x1080 pixels at 25fps in the AVCHD format. Please note that this 19 second movie is 41.1Mb in size.
Product Images
Front of the Panasonic Lumix GF6 |
Front of the Panasonic Lumix GF6 / Lens Attached |
Front of the Panasonic Lumix GF6 / Flash Raised |
Side of the Panasonic Lumix GF6 |
Side of the Panasonic Lumix GF6 |
Side of the Panasonic Lumix GF6 |
Side of the Panasonic Lumix GF6 |
Rear of the Panasonic Lumix GF6 |
Rear of the Panasonic Lumix GF6 / Image Displayed |
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Rear of the Panasonic Lumix GF6 / Turned On |
Rear of the Panasonic Lumix GF6 / Main Menu |
Rear of the Panasonic Lumix GF6 / Main Menu |
Rear of the Panasonic Lumix GF6 / Quick Menu |
Rear of the Panasonic Lumix GF6 / Wi-Fi Menu |
Rear of the Panasonic Lumix GF6 / Tilting LCD Screen |
Rear of the Panasonic Lumix GF6 / Tilting LCD Screen |
Rear of the Panasonic Lumix GF6 / Tilting LCD Screen |
Rear of the Panasonic Lumix GF6 / Tilting LCD Screen |
Top of the Panasonic Lumix GF6 |
Bottom of the Panasonic Lumix GF6 |
Side of the Panasonic Lumix GF6 |
Side of the Panasonic Lumix GF6 |
Front of the Panasonic Lumix GF6 |
Front of the Panasonic Lumix GF6 |
Memory Card Slot |
Battery Compartment |
Conclusion
The new Panasonic Lumix GF6 is an excellent compact system camera that offers more features and performs much better than its entry-level price-tag might first suggest. Now additionally offering built in Wi-Fi and NFC connectivity, a clever 180 degree tilting touch screen, welcome re-inclusion of the shooting mode dial, creative movie mode, sweep panoramas, stop motion movies, not to mention a brand new sensor with an expanded ISO range, the GF6 represents a big step forward for the GF-range and one that will appeal to beginners and enthusiasts alike.
Slightly bigger and heavier than its predecessor, the GF6 may no longer be the smallest compact system camera on the block, but it is one of the most well-appointed for the money. The GF6 may still lack a flash hot shoe, accessory port, viewfinder and dedicated ISO button, but we'd bet that most prospective GF6 owners won't miss those features, especially if they stick to the kit lenses and don't venture into longer focal length territory.
This latest generation of Lumix G takes things a stage further than its predecessor in terms of still image quality, with a usable ISO range of 160-1600 and good results even at 3200, despite a substantial increase in the megapixel count. The GF6 still can't quite rival a decent DSLR or CSC camera with an APS-C sized sensor in low-light, but the gap has definitely narrowed, so much so that unless you routinely shoot in more testing conditions you'll hardly notice the difference.
All in all the Panasonic Lumix GF6 is a surprisingly capable camera that will more than satisfy a lot of people's needs, including both casual snappers and more serious photographers alike. You'd be hard-pushed to find such a well-rounded, well-connected, and, well, great performing camera without spending quite a lot more, making the new Panasonic Lumix GF6 richly deserving of our coveted Highly Recommended award.
Ratings (out of 5) | |
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Design | 4.5 |
Features | 4.5 |
Ease-of-use | 4.5 |
Image quality | 4.5 |
Value for money | 4.5 |
Main Rivals
Listed below are some of the rivals of the Panasonic Lumix GF6.
Canon EOS M
The Canon EOS M is a new compact system camera that boasts 18 megapixels, full 1080p high-definition videos with continuous auto-focusing, and a touch-screen interface. Other key features of the EOS M include a 3-inch LCD screen with 1,040k dot resolution, ISO range of 100-25,600, and a flash hotshoe. Is Canon's new mirrorless model a real contender? Read our Canon EOS M review to find out...
Nikon 1 J3
The Nikon 1 J3 is the new mid-range model in Nikon's compact system camera line-up. The J3 offers more megapixels, a smaller and lighter body, and a more simplified control layout than its predecessor, the 4-month-old J2. Read our in-depth Nikon 1 J3 review now...
Olympus E-PL5
The Olympus E-PL5 is a new compact system camera that offers a lot more than first meets the eye. Also known as the PEN Lite, the EPL5 has exactly the same image sensor and processing engine as the flagship OM-D E-M5. It also boasts the World's fastest autofocus system, a 3 inch tilting LCD display, full 1080p HD movies, and an extensive range of creative filters. Read our in-depth Olympus E-PL5 review to find out if it's a true bargain or not...
Pentax Q10
The new Pentax Q10 is a brand new interchangeable lens camera that's as small as a compact yet as full-featured as a DSLR. Read our Pentax Q10 review to find out if this tiny camera is a realistic alternative to a high-end compact or a budget DSLR...
Samsung NX1000
The Samsung NX1000 is a new wallet-friendly mirrorless camera aimed at beginners upgrading from a simpler compact. Featuring a 20 megapixel APS-C sensor, full 1080p video, ISO 100-12,800, a 3-inch AMOLED screen, 8fps continuous shooting and Wi-fi connectivity, read our in-depth Samsung NX200 review to discover if this is the best budget compact system camera.
Sony NEX-3N
The NEX-3N is Sony's new entry-level compact system camera for 2013. Billed as the "world’s smallest, lightest interchangeable lens camera", the NEX-3N is also one of the cheapest mirrorless cameras on the market. It features a 16 megapixel APS-C sensor, 1080i HD movies, 3 inch tilting screen and built-in flash. Read our in-depth Sony NEX-3N review, complete with sample JPEGs, RAW files and movies.
Review Roundup
Reviews of the Panasonic Lumix GF6 from around the web.
pocket-lint.com »
The Panasonic Lumix GF6 is far from just a subtle upgrade to the series. Even though there's still no hotshoe or viewfinder - something we doubt will ever make it to the GF-series - it's otherwise just about the most feature-packed entry-level compact system camera we've yet seen.
Read the full review »
techradar.com »
Panasonic is known for quickly refreshing its cameras lineup, especially those at the budget end of the range. The GF series, which is the company's beginner option, was last upgraded roughly 12 months ago, so it's no surprise to see the replacement Panasonic GF6 making an appearance now.
Read the full review »
ephotozine.com »
The Panasonic Lumix GF6 is the latest entry level mirrorless camera from Panasonic, and features a 16 megapixel sensor, 3inch tilting touch screen and built in Wi-Fi as well as NFC. It's available with the new 14-42mm f/3.5-5.6 lens with Mega optical image stabilisation.
Read the full review »
Specifications
TYPE |
|
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Type | Digital Single Lens Mirrorless camera |
Recording media | SD memory card, SDHC memory card, SDXC memory card (Compatible with UHS-I standard SDHC/SDXC memory cards) |
Image sensor size | 17.3 x 13.0 mm (in 4:3 aspect ratio) |
Lens Mount | Micro Four Thirds mount |
IMAGE SENSOR |
|
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Type | Live MOS Sensor |
Total pixels | 16.68 Megapixels |
Camera effective pixels | 16.00 Megapixels |
Colour filter | Primary color filter |
Dust reduction system | Supersonic wave filter |
RECORDING SYSTEM |
|
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Recording file format | Still Image: JPEG(DCF, Exif 2.3), RAW, / MPO (When attaching 3D lens in Micro Four Thirds standard) / Motion Image: AVCHD (Audio format: Dolby Digital 2 ch) / / MP4 (Audio format AAC 2ch) |
Aspect ratio | 4:3, 3:2, 16:9, 1:1 |
Image quality | RAW, RAW+Fine, RAW+Standard, Fine, Standard, / MPO+Fine, MPO+Standard (When attaching 3D lens in Micro Four Thirds System standard) |
Color Space | sRGB, Adobe RGB |
File size(Pixels) | |
Still Image | [4:3] 4592x3448(L) / 3232x2424(M) / 2272x1704(S) / 1824x1368(When attaching 3D lens in Micro Four Third System standard) / [3:2] 4592x3064(L) / 3232x2160(M) / 2272x1520(S) / 1824x1216(When attaching 3D lens in Micro Four Third System standard) / [16:9] 4592x2584(L) / 3232x1824(M) / 1920x1080(S) / 1824x1024(When attaching 3D lens in Micro Four Third System standard) / [1:1] 3424x3424(L) / 2416x2416(M) / 1712x1712(S) / 1712x1712(When attaching 3D lens in Micro Four Third System standard) |
Continuous recordable time (Motion images) | AVCHD : Approx. 140 min with H-FS1442A |
Actual recordable time (Motion images) | AVCHD : Approx. 70 min with H-FS1442A |
WiFi FUNCTION |
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WiFi | IEEE 802.11b/g/n, 2412MHz - 2462MHz (11ch), Wi-Fi / WPA / WPA2, Infrastructure mode |
NFC | ISO/IEC 18092(NFCIP-1) NFC-F |
FOCUS |
|
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Type | Contrast AF system |
Focus mode | AFS (Single) / AFF (Flexible) / AFC (Continuous) / MF |
AF mode | Face detection / AF Tracking / 23-area-focusing / 1-area-focusing / Pinpoint |
AF detective range | EV -3 - 18 (ISO100 equivalent) |
AF assist lamp | YES |
AF lock | Set the Fn button in custom menu to AF lock |
Others | Quick AF, Continuous AF (during motion image recording), Touch AF/AE Function, AF+MF, Touch shutter, Touch MF Assist, |
EXPOSURE CONTROL |
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Light metering system | 1728-zone multi-pattern sensing system |
Light metering mode | Intelligent Multiple / Center Weighted / Spot |
Metering range | EV 0 - 18 (F2.0 lens, ISO100 equivalent) |
Exposure mode | Program AE, Aperture Priority AE, Shutter Priority AE, Manual, |
ISO sensitivity (Standard Output Sensitivity) | Auto / Intelligent ISO / 160 / 200 / 400 / 800 / 1600 / 3200 / 6400 / 12800 / 25600 (Extended) / (Changeable to 1/3 EV step) |
Exposure compensation | 1/3EV Step ±3EV |
AE lock | Set the Fn button in custom menu to AE lock |
AE bracket | 3,5 frame, in 1/3 or 2/3 EV Step, ±4/3 EV |
WHITE BALANCE |
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White balance | Auto / Daylight / Cloudy / Shade / Incandescent / Flash / White Set 1, 2 / Color temperature setting |
White balance adjustment | Blue/amber bias, Magenta/green bias |
Color temperature setting | 2500-10000K in 100K |
White balance bracket | 3 exposures in blue/ amber axis or in magenta/ green axis |
SHUTTER |
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Type | Focal-plane shutter |
Shutter speed | Still Images: 1/4000 ~ 60 / Motion image: 1/16000 ~ 1/30 (NTSC), 1/16000 ~ 1/25 (PAL) |
Self timer | 3 images after 10sec, / 2sec / 10sec |
SCENE GUIDE |
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Still image | Clear Portrait / Silky Skin / Backlit Softness / Clear in Backlight / Relaxing Tone / Sweet Child's Face / Distinct Scenery / Bright Blue Sky / Romantic Sunset Glow / / Vivid Sunset Glow / Glistening Water / Clear Nightscape / Cool Night Sky / Warm Glowing Nightscape / Artistic Nightscape / Glittering Illuminations / / Clear Night Portrait / Soft Image of a Flower / Appetizing Food / Cute Dessert / Freeze Animal Motion / Clear Sports Shot / Monochrome |
Video | Clear Portrait / Silky Skin / Backlit Softness / Clear in Backlight / Relaxing Tone / Sweet Child's Face / Distinct Scenery / Bright Blue Sky / Romantic Sunset Glow / / Vivid Sunset Glow / Clear Nightscape / Cool Night Sky / Warm Glowing Nightscape / Artistic Nightscape / Clear Night Portrait / Appetizing Food / Cute Dessert / / Freeze Animal Motion / Clear Sports Shot / Monochrome |
BURST SHOOTING |
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Burst speed | SH: 20frames/sec, H: 4.2 frames/sec(with AFS), M: 3frames/sec (with Live View), L: 2.0 frames/sec (with Live View) |
Number of recordable images | 7 images (when there are RAW files with the particular speed) / Unlimited consecutive shooting (when there are no RAW files) / (depending on memory card size, battery power, picture size, and compression) |
BUILT-IN-FLASH |
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Type | TTL Built-in-Flash, GN6.3 equivalent (ISO 160 ・m), GN5.0 equivalent (ISO 100 ・m), Built-in Pop-up |
Flash Mode | Auto, Auto/Red-eye Reduction, Forced On, Forced On/Red-eye Reduction, Slow Sync., Slow Sync./Red-eye Reduction, Forced Off |
Synchronization speed | Less than 1/160 second |
Flash synchronization | 1st. Curtain Sync |
LCD MONITOR |
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Type | TFT LCD with Touch panel, Tiltable monitor |
Monitor size | 3.0inch / 3:2 Aspect / Wide-viewing angle |
Pixels | 1040K dots |
Filed of view | Approx. 100% |
Monitor adjustment | Brightness, Contrast and Saturation, Red tint, Blue tint |
LIVE VIEW |
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Digital zoom | 2x, 4x |
Extra Tele Conversion | Still image: Max.2x (When a picture size of S(4M), aspect ratio of 4:3 is selected. Magnification ratio depends on the recording pixels and aspect ratio.) / Motion image: 2.4x (FSH in AVCHD and FHD in MP4), 3.6x (SH in AVCHD and HD in MP4), 4.8x (VGA in MP4) |
Other functions | Guide Lines (3 patterns) / Real-time Histogram |
LEVEL GAUGE |
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Level Gauge | No |
DIRECTION DETECTION FUNCTION |
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Self Shot | Yes |
Direction Detection Function | Yes |
FUNCTION BUTTON |
|
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Fn1, Fn2, Fn3, Fn4 | WiFi / Q.MENU / AF/AE LOCK / ONE PUSH AE / PREVIEW / PHOTO STYLE / ASPECT RATIO / PICTURE SIZE / QUALITY / FOCUS MODE/ / METERING MODE / HDR / FLASH MODE / FLASH ADJUST. / I.RESOLUTION / I.DYNAMIC / EX. TELE CONV. / DIGITAL ZOOM / STABILIZER / SENSITIVITY / / RESTORE TO DEFAULT / Motion Pic. Set / PICTURE MODE / HISTOGRAM / GUIDE LINE / STEP ZOOM / ZOOM SPEED /REC AREA |
CREATIVE CONTROL |
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Still image | Expressive / Retro / Old Days / High Key / Low Key / Sepia / Dynamic Monochrome / Impressive Art / High Dynamic / Cross Process / Toy Effect / Toy POP / / Bleach Bypass / Miniature Effect / Soft Focus / Fantasy / Star Filter / One Point Color / Sunshine |
Video | Expressive / Retro / Old Days / High Key / Low Key / Sepia / Dynamic Monochrome / Impressive Art / High Dynamic / Cross Process / Toy Effect / Toy POP / / Bleach Bypass / Miniature Effect / Fantasy / One Point Color |
CREATIVE VIDEO MODE |
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Exposure Mode | Program AE/ Aperture-Priority / Sutter-Priority / Manual Exposure |
PHOTO STYLE |
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Still image and Video | Standard / Vivid / Natural / Monochrome / Scenery / Portrait / Custom |
PLAYBACK |
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Playback mode | Normal playback, 30-thumbnail display, 12-thumbnail display, Calendar display, Zoomed playback (16x Max.), Slideshow (duration & effect is selectable), / Playback Mode (Normal/Picture/Video/3D Play/Category/Favorite), Location Logging, Clear Retouch, Title Edit, Text Stamp, Video Divide, Stop Motion Animation, / Resize, Cropping, Rotate, Favorite, Print set, Protect, Face Recognition Edit |
IMAGE PROTECTION / ERASE |
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Protection | Single / Multi, Cancel |
Erase | Single / Multi / All / Except Favorite |
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Direct Print | PictBridge compatible(Print size, Layout, Date setting are selectable ) |
INTERFACE |
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USB | USB 2.0 High Speed Multi |
HDMI | miniHDMI TypeC / Video: Auto / 1080i / 720p / 480p (576p in PAL system) / Audio: Stereo |
Audio video output | Monaural Type, NTSC/PAL, NTSC only for North America / *Check the website of the Panasonic sales company in your country or region for details on the products that are available in your market. |
Microphone | Stereo, Wind-cut: Off / Auto / Flicker reduction / Microphone level adjustable: Lv1 / Lv2 / Lv3 / Lv4 |
Speaker | Monaural |
LANGUAGE |
|
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OSD language | Japanese, English, German, French, Italian, Spanish(English) |
POWER |
|
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Battery | Li-ion Battery Pack (7.2V, 1025mAh) (Included) / Battery Charger |
Battery life (CIPA standard) | Approx. 330 images with H-PS14042 / Approx. 340 images with H-FS1442A / Approx. 340 images with H-FS45150 |
DIMENSIONS / WEIGHT |
|
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Dimensions (W x H x D) | 111.2 x 64.8 x 38.4 mm / 4.378 x 2.551 x 1.512 inch (excluding protrusions) |
Weight | Approx. 323g / 11.39 oz (SD card, Battery, Body) / Approx. 280g / 9.88 oz (Body only) / Approx. 432g / 15.24 oz (SD card, Battery, H-FS1442A lens included) |
OPERATING ENVIRONMENT |
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---|---|
Operating temperature | 0℃ to 40℃ (32°F to 104°F) |
Operating humidity | 10% RH to 80% RH |
STANDARD ACCESSORIES |
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Software | PHOTOfunSTUDIO 9.2 AE / SILKYPIX® Developer Studio 3.1 SE / LoiLoScope (trial version) / USB Driver |
Standard accessories | Body, LUMIX G VARIO 14-42 mm / F3.5-5.6 II ASPH. / MEGA O.I.S. (H-FS1442A), Lens Cap, Lens Hood, Battery Charger, Battery Pack, USB Connection Cable, Shoulder Strap, CD-ROM / • Body cap and lens rear cap are not included. |
INTERCHANGEABLE LENS-1 |
|
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Lens Name | LUMIX G VARIO 14-42mm / F3.5-5.6 II ASPH. / MEGA O.I.S. |
Lens Construction | 9 elements in 8 groups (2 aspherical lenses) |
Nano Surface Coating | - |
Mount | Micro Four Thirds mount |
Optical Image Stabilizer | Yes (MEGA O.I.S.) |
Focal Length | f=14-42mm (35mm camera equivalent 28-84mm) |
Aperture Type | 7 diaphragm blades / Circular aperture diaphragm |
Maximum Aperture | F3.5(Wide) - F5.6(Tele) |
Minimum Aperture | F22 |
Closest Focusing Distance | 0.2m/0.66ft (at focal lenghts 14-20mm) / 0.3m/0.98ft (at focal lenghts 21-42mm) |
Maximum magnification | Approx. 0.17x / 0.34x (35mm camera equivalent) |
Diagonal Angle of View | 75°(Wide) to 29°(TELE) |
General | |
Filter Size | 46mm / 1.8in |
Max. Diameter | φ56mm / 2.2in |
Overall Length | Approx. 49mm / 1.9in (from the tip of the lens to the base side of the lens mount) |
Weight [g] | Approx. 110g (excluding lens cap, lens rear cap, and Lens hood) |
Weight [oz] | Approx. 3.88oz (excluding lens cap, lens rear cap, and Lens hood) |
Further Specifications |
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NOTE | * Use a card with SD Speed Class with "Class4" or higher / *2 Motion images can be recorded continuously for up to 29 min 59 sec in Europe and some Asian areas. |
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