Canon Digital IXUS 750

The good:

  • Very well designed
  • The best start-up time in its class
  • Quick shot-to-shot performance
  • Novel fast frame-rate movie mode

The bad:

  • More frequent than usual purple fringing
  • Longish flash shot-to-shot times.

The bottomline:

The Canon Digital IXUS 750 is a very well-designed, 7-megapixel snapshot camera. Just don't look for advanced controls.

Buying choices:

Editors' rating:

7.2/10

Users' rating:

8.3/10

A slightly more expensive version of the IXUS 700, which remains in Canon's product lineup, the Canon Digital IXUS 750 comes with a larger 2.5-inch LCD and a new finish. Like its sibling, it has an exterior design that combines form and function more elegantly than any point-and-shoot we've ever tested.

A Digic II-powered image-processing system enables the IXUS 750 to snap a limitless stream of 7-megapixel photos at a respectable clip, its start-up time is tops in its class, and it delivers decent photos when compared to its competition.

Design
Just to get it out there: As far as we're concerned, this should be the way point-and-shoot cameras look and feel for the foreseeable future. In other words, forget about Sony's form-over-function DSC-T1 and its many stylistic imitators. We love the Canon IXUS 750's external design; it's small without being unwieldy, feels solid without being heavy (the camera weighs 189g with battery and media installed), and is, overall, a joy to hold and shoot. Though prone to the occasional scratch, its silver-metallic exterior is a marked aesthetic improvement over the more plastic-looking IXUS 30 and IXUS 40.

In practice, the IXUS 750 is small enough to fit in your pants pocket without looking like you've sprouted a renegade thigh but substantial enough that you can shoot without worrying that your fingers will block the lens, the flash, or the optical viewfinder. And on that subject: After increasing the LCD to 2.5 inches, Canon had to shrink the optical viewfinder we liked so much in the IXUS 700. Though small, it still gives you decent coverage, allowing you to see close to 90 percent of your shot. In a camera this size, that's an achievement--not to take anything away from the IXUS 750's LCD screen, which is bright and clearly visible both indoors and out. In some cases, you'll have to zoom in a bit to ensure your picture doesn't blur, but otherwise, we didn't miss the larger screens found on some competing cameras.

All of the IXUS 750's rear controls are located to the right of the LCD screen, well within the reach of your thumb. Canon made the intelligent decision to place the camera's four-way selector and function button at the center of its rear control area. The function menu itself remains largely unchanged, granting easy access to such settings as white balance, ISO sensitivity, exposure compensation, image size, and compression level. There are also three separate rear buttons: One to toggle the LCD on and off, another to bring up the camera's setup menu, and a third to enable direct printer connectivity. The rear dial lets you choose from Review, Automatic Exposure, Manual Exposure, Scene, and Movie modes. The dial itself is responsive, and once we got used to the camera, it was easy to switch from mode to mode simply by remembering how many clicks it took to get from one to the other.

Features
Here's an important question to ask yourself before you read any further: Do you want your next digital camera to have manual features, such as shutter- and aperture-priority modes? If your answer is yes, then the Canon IXUS 750 is not the camera for you. The 750's Digic II image-processing system is capable of some impressive things, but in this camera, control over your exposure settings is not one of them.

Now, you might not want or need to bother with manual photography, or you might already have a digital SLR in your photographic arsenal and are looking for a pocket snapshot camera for more discreet shooting. To the 750's credit, though we're used to tweaking the exposure settings, after a while we didn't even notice that the IXUS 700 lacked them. Admittedly, these weren't high-pressure artistic situations, and the camera is somewhat prone to blurring shots when your arms aren't perfectly still, but it's worth noting that, by and large, the 750 managed to overcome our initial, manual-born skepticism.

The 750 sports a 3x optical zoom lens with a 37mm-to-111mm (35mm equivalent) focal-length range. The 37mm widest-angle focal length is still somewhat narrow, though not uncommonly so for a pocket camera. The lens aperture can range from F2.8 to F4.9, but due to the camera's lack of manual controls, the aperture setting you get from shot to shot will be determined by the camera. There's no manual focus, which can be a problem if you're having trouble with blurred shots or want to have tighter control over your focus in the 750's otherwise effective macro mode. Movie clips are available in VGA (640 x 480) resolutions at 30fps, with durations limited only by the capacity of your media. One novel feature offered by Digic II is the 320 x 240 video setting that captures clips at a brisk 60fps, useful for anyone who wants to take a frame-by-frame look at their golf or baseball swings.

A few largely superfluous shooting functions lie buried in the 750's function menu. There's a Digital Macro mode--a digital zoom, really--for more closely composing your close-ups in-camera, as well as a My Colors mode that simulates a variety of colour filters. There are also nine preset scene modes available on the Scene dial setting, ranging from such standards as Portrait and Indoor to more specialised choices as Underwater and Fireworks. The camera's maximum photo resolution comes in at 3,072 x 2,304, stepping all the way down to a Web-friendly 640 x 480; if you're looking for wider in-camera composition, it also offers a 1,600 x 1,200 Postcard setting.

Performance
Looking at the Canon IXUS 750's performance scores, it's clear that the company's Digic II processor has a lot to offer, though there's also room for improvement. The 750 remains one of the champions of point-and-shoot-camera start-up time, going from power-on to first shot in a mere 1.6 seconds. The 750 also posted some decent scores in the shutter-lag department, logging a delay of 0.7 second under optimal light and 0.8 second under dim conditions. With the flash disabled, shot-to-shot times averaged a little less than 2 seconds, placing it in the top third of compact snapshot cameras; enabling the flash slowed things down significantly, upping the time to a more middling 3.4 seconds. The camera's burst mode captured 10 full-resolution shots before flagging at a pace of 2fps, while dropping the resolution and upping the compression increased the number of shots we could snap to somewhere beyond 50 but slowed down to to 1.8fps.

Shooting speed in seconds  
(Shorter bars indicate better performance)
Typical shot-to-shot time  
Shutter lag (typical)  
Time to first shot  
Canon Digital IXUS 750
2.0 
0.7 
1.6 
Sony Cyber Shot DSC-P150
1.9 
0.6 
3.0 
Canon PowerShot S70
2.0 
0.8 
3.1 
Olympus C-7000
2.3 
0.5 
2.2 

The 750's proprietary Lithium-ion battery performed very well, giving the camera enough power to get through nearly 1,300 shots before it sputtered and died. There are six stops along the camera's 3x optical-zoom range; since there's no onscreen indicator of where you are along the continuum, you'll either have to guess or zoom all the way out to orient yourself. Zooming action is a bit noisy, but unless you're engaging in some serious covert ops, the sound won't impede the camera's overall functionality.


For an ultracompact camera, the IXUS 750 produced some very sharp shots (left), as you can tell from the detail above (right).

It's no surprise that the IXUS 750's photos match those of the IXUS 700 since they use the same components. Overall, the IXUS 750 delivered sharp, almost too-saturated images, with a slightly cool white balance. Metering and exposure were top-notch, even in difficult backlit and sidelit scenes. Though it tended to blow out highlights a bit more than we'd like, we saw excellent dynamic range in the midtones and shadows. Because blown-out highlights tend to create high-contrast edges, however, we also saw more frequent purple fringing there and on the sides of the scene, where lens focus falls off. Shots taken at ISO 50 and ISO 100 displayed relatively low noise; as expected, noise did become more apparent at settings of ISO 200 and ISO 400.

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canon digital cameras
16/06/2008, 03:57 PM

rating
8
/10

Great camera introduced by canon. I like its stylish and attractive design. This camera is much faster and efficient than many others.

Pros: Anti-blur mode.
Zippy performance.
Attractive design.

Cons: Nothing.

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spud
28/04/2008, 08:02 AM

rating
6
/10

good bit of gear

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Fakhru
06/01/2008, 08:46 PM

rating
7
/10

Its good for pic & movs

Pros: Is there any software for upgrade to support SDHC memory card??

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henry
17/02/2007, 10:33 AM

rating
6
/10

Does the underwater housing pictured come with the camera?

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Anonymous
04/02/2007, 07:29 PM

rating
10
/10


31/08/2006, 12:35 AM

rating
2
/10

Pretty Shocking to Me!

Pros: 7.1 MP camera is terrific at shoooting photos with precision and clarity

Cons: quite bigger than other cameras and the other ixus series

easily scratched

quite and expensive camera with nominal functions

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30/04/2006, 08:06 PM

very very very good

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