Kodak EasyShare Z1085 IS

By Joshua Goldman on 22 January 2009

The Kodak EasyShare Z1085 IS is good value with decent photo quality, a well-rounded feature set, and a compact, solid-feeling design.

Editor's rating:6.6 User rating:2
  • Good: 5x zoom lens atypical for the price • Easy operation • HD video capture with optical zoom
  • Bad: Occasionally overexposes photos • Only three-shot burst mode • Mediocre performance
  • Specs: Digital compact • 10 megapixels • 2.5 inch • 5 x • See more specifications
  • RRP: AU$299.00

Design
The 10-megapixel Kodak EasyShare Z1085 IS is deceptively good. It doesn't stand out with a unique design and there are no overtly special features: it's a pretty straight-laced compact and comes in dark grey/black only and its ridiculously and unusable high ISO 8000 setting doesn't really qualify. Judging by its sub-AU$300 price, you wouldn't expect much from it, either. However, the Z1085 IS rewards simply by being a decent camera that's easy to use and produces very good photos for little investment — of time or money.

The 164g Z1085 is relatively compact — 8.9cm wide by 6.4cm high by 3.9cm thick — and will fit in a large pants pocket, though the protruding lens surround and hand grip will keep you from sliding it out easily. That grip, however, makes one-handed shooting possible. Buttons are nice and big, clearly labelled, and well spaced. On top, buttons for drive mode, flash, power and a mode dial surround the shutter release. On the dial joining Kodak's auto mode — called Smart Capture — sit manual and program options, panoramic shooting (left to right or right to left), scene mode with 16 setting choices, and movie capture.

Features
Smart Capture mode integrates scene and face detection, optimised auto ISO, and a broader dynamic range, among other things, so you truly don't have to worry about a setting to take a decent picture. This mode also applies Kodak's PerfectTouch technology to help improve detail and contrast. In general this system works, producing fine photos regardless of subject or lighting conditions and is one of the better automatic modes we've tested.

The Z series is Kodak's megazoom line, which currently goes all the way up to 24x; the 5x f/2.8-5.1 35-175mm-equivalent lens on the lowest-end Z1085 IS doesn't even really qualify as a megazoom. It does have barrel distortion at its widest setting, typical of its class but a bit much given its relatively narrow 35mm-equivalent angle of view. Still it's nice to have the extra power above similarly priced 3x models, and you get optical image stabilisation, too. For framing shots and photo playback there's a 2.5-inch LCD on back.

Performance and image quality
While we wouldn't consider the Z1085 IS sluggish, it's not speedy, either. It takes 2.9 seconds to go from off to first shot. Shutter lag is pretty good at 0.4 second in bright conditions and 0.7 second in dim. Though its typical shot-to-shot times of 2.6 and 3.2 seconds with flash may be average for its class, that's still pretty slow. Its burst mode is limited to three shots — first three or last three — but the speed is a respectable 1.3 frames per second.

In general, the photos from the Z1085 IS are good for the money. Colours are generally accurate as is white balance, both indoors and out. Detail remains good up to ISO 200 with little to no noise and no issues from suppression. At ISO 400, however, aggressive noise reduction in the red channel turns red objects smeary and the photos develop the typical over-blurred, painterly look. The camera boasts ISO settings up to 3,200 at full resolution and up to ISO 8000 at a 3-megapixel resolution. The results at these ISOs are pretty useless. Yes, you'll capture something that may be acceptable for web use at a small size, but if you're expecting to get the same performance that the camera gives you at ISO 800, you'll be disappointed. Exposure also tends to be a bit off, with occasional blown-out highlights.

The Z1085 IS, like many Kodak cameras, records 30fps 720p HD video (1280x720) in MPEG-4 format. The video quality is very good for a point-and-shoot camera, especially if you're keeping the camera focused on the subject and not moving around too much. Otherwise, the camera's exposure metering and focus will abruptly change causing scenes to suddenly be blurry and exposure to be off, and it takes a couple seconds to correct it. It supports optical zoom in movie capture, which is nice.

The 10-megapixel Kodak EasyShare Z1085 IS offers up a reasonably price-to-feature ratio, produces good, though occasionally overexposed, photos at ISO 200 and below, and offers uncomplicated operation. But while the 5x optical zoom is nice to have, performance is merely average for its class.

Shooting speed (in seconds)
(Smaller bars indicate better performance)
Time to first shot  
Typical shot-to-shot time (flash)  
Typical shot-to-shot time  
Shutter lag (dim)  
Shutter lag (typical)  
Kodak EasyShare Z1085 IS
2.9 
3.2 
2.6 
0.7 
0.4 
Sony Cyber-shot DSC-W150
1.9 
3.7 
1.5 
0.9 
0.4 
Canon PowerShot A580
1.6 
5.9 
2.2 
1.2 
0.4 

Typical continuous-shooting speed (in frames per second)
(Longer bars indicate better performance)
Kodak EasyShare Z1085 IS
1.3 

Topics: kodak, easyshare, digital camera, Z1085 IS, shot, iso, typical, camera, 0.4, mode

Comments (1)

  • Blackie gave 2/10 on 30/08/2009 17:49 Report abuse

    • Good: NIce shots. easy to use
    • Bad: Batteries

    Great Camera, chews up the batteries very easily. Have tried the top of the range Duracell (40 shots), re-chargeable batteries (40 shots too). Buy another camera, although great shots, the expense of batteries is just too much.

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