Image quality is very good, with accurate-looking colors, though we did notice a minor amount of purple fringing in some photos. The camera's automatic white balance produces slightly warm images under incandescent lighting, but does a nice job of neutralizing colors when shooting under fluorescent lighting or natural daylight. There's an impressive amount of sharpness, though of course, some of this becomes obscured at higher ISOs. We saw some ISO noise even at the camera's lowest sensitivity setting of ISO 100, though it's only really noticeable on computer monitors and won't show up in prints. At ISO 200, noise remains well under control, though at ISO 400, the sharpness of finer details starts to deteriorate, a small amount of shadow detail is lost, and you'll start to notice that smooth objects take on a textured, or mottled look. At ISO 800, all of these conditions worsen appreciably, but you should still be able to get a decent 4x6 print from images shot at this setting. By ISO 1,600, small text that was viewable at lower sensitivities becomes unreadable, most shadow detail is lost, and the entire image becomes covered in noise that makes images look more like paintings than photos. We recommend that you stay below ISO 1,600 whenever possible, and below ISO 800 if you plan on printing larger than 4x6 inches.
The Fujifilm FinePix F40fd is a nice, but not exceptional, point-and-shoot camera. Most casual snapshooters will likely be pleased with the images they get from this model. If you're willing to spend a little more, Canon's PowerShot SD800 IS will get you optical image stabilization and an optical viewfinder.
(Shorter bars indicate better performance)
| Typical shot-to-shot time | Time to first shot | Shutter lag (typical) |
(Longer bars indicate better performance)
What You'll Pay
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