Giorgio Armani Samsung Phone camera samples
How does the camera on the Giorgio Armani Samsung Phone perform? We select examples of digital photos taken with its 3-megapixel camera
The Giorgio Armani Samsung Phone may be an ultra-slim, highly compact touchscreen device, but Samsung has still managed to cram a 3-megapixel camera, with a flash, into the back of the phone. This can capture video too. The lens is a fixed focus type, with no autofocus control or macro shooting mode for precision close-up shooting.
As it's not a 3G-enabled phone, there's no need for a secondary video calling camera on this device - all shooting's done with the 3-megapixel main snapper.
The phone's large 2.6-inch, 262K-colour QVGA display is an able platform for framing snaps as the viewfinder. In fact, touchscreen operation means that most of the controls - and all the settings adjustments - are carried out by pressing the screen.
A camera button on the side of the phone gives you a quick access route into the camera from standby, although you can also activate it from the main menu grid. Switching on the camera, the phone automatically re-orientates itself into landscape mode, like a standalone digital camera, with the camera button now acting as the snap-capture button.
Moving finger operation includes zoom control and brightness level adjustments. The phone has a 10-step 4x digital zoom, available on all resolutions; moving your finger across to the right increases the zoom, to the left decreases it. Similarly, brightness is adjusted by moving up and down the screen.
There are a series of icons displayed on the left of the screen to indicate the camera's current status and settings; these aren't tappable; the column of four icons on the right of the screen are the virtual control buttons.
The bottom two allow you to quickly set a shot timer, for 3, 5 or 10 seconds, and turn the flash on or off by tapping. The top two take care of other settings. The top button allows you into a carousel to select the operation mode (camera, camcorder, settings adjustments and so on), while the second one allows you to alter the main settings groups for the camera or camcorder.
The main settings allow you to change white balance from automatic to one of four settings for varying indoors and outdoors lighting conditions (incandescent, fluorescent, cloudy and daylight). You can add colour effets (black and white, negative, or sepia) and add fun frames to pictures. You can also take multiple shots or mosaic shots together, while you adjust resolution in six steps, from 320x240 pixels up to maximum 2048x1536 pixels resolution.
Other camera settings can be adjusted; you can set quality levels, ISO levels, and exposure metering, plus default image storage - memory card or phone memory (this is significant if the onboard memory becomes full - you won't be able to shoot high res if the phone memory can't accommodate large files). Camera sounds can also be changed or switched off.
This control system generally works adequately. With any touchscreen, you have to be careful where you put your fingers. With such a small phone, we found our large fingers occasionally straying on to a button when we were framing shots, but generally it's fine. A lot relies on you working it out, with little guidance about functions to help you. Zooming isn't as smooth an operation as we'd like; a rocker is preferable to the touch control, which demonstrates the touchscreen, but doesn't add anything to usability.
Although we were recently impressed by Samsung's 5-megapixel camera-packing G800 (which has a fine 3x optical zoom), the performance of the Giorgio Armani Samsung's camera is not up with Samsung's best.
The cameraphone can produce some reasonably detailed shots in bright lighting conditions, and mid-range shooting performance is acceptable. But there are limitations to its performance. The lack of autofocus can become apparent in mid-to-close range shots where it's difficult to ensure sharp images (you can't always tell from the view on the screen).
We found colour rendition generally good, even when dull outdoor conditions prevailed. There were some issues with exposure and contrast however, with the sensor burning out high contrast elements of pictures against moderately lit white sky. Some slight artifacts were also apparent where high contrast elements were adjacent.
Indoors, low-light shots lacked precision and were a touch soft, even with the flash engaged. The LED flash certainly brings some light to proceedings, but doesn't fill in as well as a Xenon, with quite limited illumination across images.
As we said, you can comfortably reproduce your best images as standard photo prints. However, the performance is below the best quality 3-megapixel cameraphones available.
Another element worth noting about the imaging performance is that getting images displayed from your memory card and making adjustments to these takes a frustratingly long time - much moreso than if you're accessing them from the phone's onboard memory.
You can achieve reasonable mid- and long-range shots if there's sufficient illumination and the camera is kept steady
It's possible to compose some pleasant shots you'll be happy to print. There's enough detail to print them as standard sized photos
You can take typical tourist shots with the Armani Phone's camera. Mid shots such as these of telephone boxes are reasonably well detailed. There is some exposure issues, with some burn out of the tree against a cloudy white sky
In dull light conditions, the 3-megapixel camera is able to capture a good range of detail in this mid shot. Colours are also well-rendered
Again, in this mid-range shot colours there's some good detaiing, but at the top of the picture there are some contrast issues with branches and lamposts against the white clouds
Colours here are bright and vivid. However, with no autofocus, it can be tricky to ensure subjects are in focus. Here, the guitar, which looked fine on the phone's display, is slightly soft, with the amp behind looking sharper
Without an autofocus and macro facility, it's not possible to get sharp close-up shots; here the background is detailed but the flowers in the foreground half a metre away from the camera are blurred
Indoors, with the flash on, the image is brighter but it's not evenly illuminated. The subject is soft too
This indoors, with black and white piano keys contrasting was taken indoors without a flash. Colours are not precisely rendered, there's a bit of noise and the top right of the picture is overexposed by a small amount of outside lighting
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