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Fujifilm FinePix Z5fd (raspberry red)

Fujifilm FinePix Z5fd (raspberry red)
  • Quick specs
  • Digital camera type: Ultracompact
  • Resolution: 6.3 megapixels
  • Optical zoom: 3 x
  • See full specifications

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The good: Attractive design; decent photos shot at high ISO sensitivity levels.

The bad: Flat, hard-to-feel buttons; lens too close to camera edge; doesn't zoom or refocus in movie mode.

The bottom line: It's thin, pretty, and reasonably fast, but exposure problems make the Fujifilm Z5fd hard to recommend to its budget snapshooter audience.

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CNET editors' review

  • Reviewed on: 09/27/2007
  • Released on: 02/06/2007

With the exception of its admittedly sleek-looking design, there's not a lot to differentiate the ultracompact Fujifilm Z5fd from a crowded field of budget competitors. Granted, it does come in an eye-melting raspberry red and a sophisticated mocha brown in addition to basic silver.

Like most, the 6-megapixel Z5fd offers a 3x zoom lens with a typically narrow f/3.5-4.2 36mm-108mm-equivalent lens. The 5-ounce camera's dimensions are 2.2 inches high by 3.6 inches wide by 0.8 inch deep, which makes it comfortable to stick in your pocket, but not quite as comfortable to shoot with. For instance, because of the combination of the camera's thin profile and the position of the lens so close to the edge, my finger frequently crept into the frame (only once did it actually end up in the photo, though).


The Z5fd's thin profile demands small controls, and the still/video switch can be especially hard to feel. Fujifilm dedicates a button to Face Detection.


Those three white ovals are actually rubberized spots that do help quite a bit when gripping the camera. The rest of the buttons, though a good size, are a bit too flat for comfort.

The Z5fd's most novel feature is the Trimming for Blog tool, which, in addition to the age-old ability to crop a photo to 640x480, allows you to download the photos to a compatible device via IrSimple. I'm not sure how popular this is in Asia, but as far as I can tell not a lot of phones in the U.S. support it. So as of now, all you can really do is bounce the photos back and forth among select Fujifilm cameras.

Calling out the face detection with a dedicated button (and, of course, the "fd" in the model name) certainly makes it easier to find and use, but I'm still on the fence about how useful it is. It can locate more than one face in a scene but must choose a single face to take priority--usually the one closest to the center of the frame. The algorithm needs to be able to resolve two eyes, which seems to mean a horizontal angle of about 25 or 30 degrees off face front; it seems to have more tolerance vertically. A face must be within roughly 20 feet, and beyond that it starts to struggle. It's not fast enough to keep up with changing positions, and you frequently end up shooting in between face-focus locks (at which point it acts like normal focus).

Another Fujifilm staple is the Natural Light and Flash scene mode, which shoots two consecutive shots, one at a high ISO setting without flash, and one at a lower ISO setting with flash. You can then choose which look you prefer. The rest of the scene modes are pretty standard: Natural Light (high ISO), Portrait, Landscape, Sport, Night, Fireworks, Sunset, Snow, Beach, Museum, Party, Flower (macro), and Text. A Picture Stabilization mode merely uses high ISO settings to enable faster shutter speeds. In macro mode the camera can focus as close as about 3.1 inches.

That's about it. The Z5fd completely lacks any manual controls. No shutter- or aperture-priority exposure, no metering choices--not even manual white balance.

Though the 2.5-inch LCD tends to blow out in bright sunlight, it otherwise works very well. Plus, the Z5fd offers the option of driving the display at 30fps, 60fps, or in a standard power save mode. Though denoted by frame rates, the 60fps does make the screen look slightly higher resolution than the other modes. As you'd guess, it draws more power, as well.

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Reviews from around the WebPowered by alaTest

  • alaTest.com

    Editors' rating: 90

    Summary: alaTest has collected and analyzed 455 reviews of Fujifilm FinePix Z5fd from international magazines and websites. Experts rate this product 75/100 and users 82/100. Comparing these reviews to 554627 other Digital Compact Cameras reviews gives this product an overall alaScore™ 90/100 = Excellent.

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  • stuff.tv

    Editors' rating: 80

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  • tech.co.uk

    Editors' rating: 80

    Summary: It would be hard to pick a more fun, proficient and delightful camera to own. Lots of useful technology in a pretty package

    Read full review

  • macformat.co.uk

    Editors' rating: 80

    Summary: A great companion for a Friday night spent in dimly lit places! Don't expect much zooming

    Read full review

  • techradar.com

    Editors' rating: 80

    Summary: However, these points don't matter too much - this camera's buyer is probably looking for something that's light to carry in a handbag, trendy-looking, and capable of taking good night-time pics. The FinePix Z5fd is exactly that

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  • photographypress.co.uk

    Editors' rating: 90

    Summary: It may be "Raspberry Red" according to Fuji, but the very Pink Fuji Z5fd I had to test is an ultra compact camera that is both simple to use and nice to look at.

    Read full review

Fujifilm FinePix Z5fd (raspberry red)