Olympus’ SH-25MR is another digital camera aimed at the ‘traveller-class’ according to the makers, designed to offer a balance between budget and shooting kit. Does it achieve this balance?

Product Overview

Overall rating:

87%

Olympus SH-25MR

Overall score:87%
Value:90%
Performance:90%
Image Quality:85%
Design:80%
Features:90%

Pros:

  • Zoom range, High-speed shooting, Touch screen AF. GPS and Compass system, Battery life, Colour capture performance, Low ISO image quality

Cons:

  • Grip needs a rubberised, grippier surface, Soft images at corners and image edges, Skin tones in portraits, Odd flash control, Display visibility in bright conditions

Product:

Olympus SH-25MR Review

Manufacturer:

Price as reviewed:

£229.00
Olympus’ SH-25MR is another digital camera aimed at the ‘traveller-class’ according to the makers. The camera has a nice 12.5x, 24-300mm (35mm equivalent) optical zoom lens and a 16-megapixel backlit CMOS sensor along with other clever stuff we’ll look at shortly.

This ‘traveller-class’ cameras then is designed to offer a balance between budget and shooting kit, though to be fair, there’s not much this camera lacks, sporting as it does, almost everything found in its higher spec SZ-31MR ultra zoom compact we recently reviewed. So what do you get for the £229.99 asking price?

Olympus SH-25MR review – Features

The camera’s 16 CMOS sensor is the same as that also fitted in cameras such as the aforementioned SZ-31MR while the F/3 to f/5.9, 12.5x optical zoom lens and its 24-300mm focal length range, provides a superb balance between the wide end for landscape shots, say, and getting in close too. It’s also backed up with Olympus’s super resolution digital zoom which works well enough if you don’t mind the smudgy effect it creates on the shots in which it is used.

The camera’s metal bodywork is rather bland in a square sort of way, but can be bought in four liveries of black, a champagne-look gold colour, a striking pinky red colour (tested here) and white. There is GPS ‘hump’ on the top plate next to a recessed and LED illuminated on/off button, the shutter realise, with its easy to use lens zoom control and a tiny, but okay to use mode dial. Along with the GPS kit there’s a neat Electronic Compass, which  downloads location data on the fly, but it takes around 7 to 15 seconds to get the data depending on the quality of the connection.

Of the main shooting modes available, you get the usual (for Olympus) suite of settings common to most Olympus compacts today and these include iAuto, there are 17 scene modes that range from Handheld Starlight and a 3D Photo mode to Pet Detection and more usual settings such as portrait and sports modes as well as a reasonably effective HDR (high dynamic range) mode.

You also have Beauty, Panorama, Olympus’s creative ‘Magic Filters’ and the excellent Multi-recording system (hence the MR in the camera’s name) that allows you to record Full HD 1080P video while you continue to shoot stills. There are also various high-speed continuous shooting modes that provide scope to capture the most fleeting subjects and the camera has the iHS technology. iHS stands for ‘Intelligent, High-Sensitivity, and High Speed’ according to Olympus and combines the best of the dual TruePic V image processors to get low noise, low light shots and keep things moving in terms of image processing.

Videos can be recorded at full 1080p with the optical zoom active throughout and benefiting from the very good Movie IS system to help keep shake to a minimum, overall then a comprehensive set of features that work well together.

Olympus SH-25MR review – Handling

The camera has a neat, robust, if bland ‚ metal body with a well placed, knurled grip on the front of the camera, though I feel a slightly more grippy surface would have helped during one handed shooting. A strip of controls down the right side of the camera’s rear act as additional hand support and combines those duties with control duties for the direct movie record button, at the top, the playback and menu buttons (both of which are difficult to read due to their text colour and typeface) and a four way jog control.

Any of you that may have used a recent Olympus camera will feel quickly at home when delving into the menu system; basic shooting options including the macro, self timer options, white balance (WB) control, resolution and ISO are ranged down the right hand side of the screen and can be got to directly via the four way jog control. A press of the OK button inside the four-way control activates, or chooses, any option selected.

The camera’s touch screen is responsive and nice to use and is also a rout to activate the camera’s focus system; press the touch screen at any point and it’ll focus at that point in the scene. Live Guide is also a great feature (in iAuto mode) that lets you change saturation, brightness, and image colour (from a warm look to cold) and that’s about it for the buttons.

The touch screen is crisp and bright but still it’s too hard to see in very bright conditions where framing, checking focus and reviewing images is very hard to do with any accuracy. As you’ve probably guessed, there’s no optical viewfinder to help save the day.

In terms of battery life, I shot for a week and got around 150 shots with video and with the GPS and compass on. GPS takes about 30-seconds to connect properly and the compass displays at the bottom of the display all the time when active. Olympus doesn’t give figures for the battery life, but on this showing it’ll be good for over 400-shots depending on the amount of flash, reviewing, video and GPS you use.

The flash is one area I had an issue with however because there are no external controls to activate it (i.e not software based). The flash unit is small, only really good enough to act as a fill-in and sits on the top left shoulder of the camera. But you cannot turn it on via a button or switch, it is only activated from the on screen menus, where it pops up as required (in auto mode) or is up all the time if switch to fill in.

Retracting the flash (push it back down) does not turn it off in the latter mode either, you have to change the setting back to off or auto in the menu again to stop it popping up. I can see why it’s been done this way but cannot see why pushing the flash down in fill-in mode cannot also switch it off in the menu system as well.

  1. 1. Olympus SH-25MR review - Features
  2. 2. Performance and Verdict
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