I saw some photos from a Lumix digital camera taken in very low light (a bar). They were black and white, with almost an infrared feeling to them, and sharp (not that grainy).Can anyone tell me which model might be able to do that, or what the feature is that allows this on a point and shoot?Thanks.
Since I haven't seen the photos you speak of there's no way to tell but, low light photos really aren't a camera issue - they're a lens issue. The camera only captures what's sent to it by the lens that's mounted. I'd also have to believe that there was some software editing done.
in case you quite need stable low gentle photos, a DSLR is the thank you to pass. The D5000 is a stable selection. It this is too huge, you are able to evaluate the uber small Olympus E-430 with the 25mm pancake lens, which will in great condition conveniently on your jacket pocket. Pentax has a form this is slightly smaller (the K10D?) in case you prefer to restrict your self to a factor and shoot, there are countless available withe APS-C sized sensors. There slightly pricy, yet while the D5000 is offered you are able to have the potential to locate one. i'm attempting to bear in innovations specifics.the Sony R1 isn't any longer made, and that's as huge as an SLR. Samsung's NX isn't available yet. the Sigma DP1 is, in case you are able to take care of a fastened 41mm lens. If all that would not excite you, seem for a digital camera with FEWER megapixels. Fewer megapixels potential that the digital camera can ramp up the sensitivity of the sensor with much less noise, because of the fact the pixels are much less squished jointly. once you seem at digital camera specs, many times the bigger the sensor and the less the megapixels, the extra effectual for low gentle pictures. that's no longer continually authentic, counting on the digital camera's NR ability. in spite of the fact that that's stable place to start.