Kodak EasyShare Z1275

By Rich Trenholm on 19 December 2007

Kodak may have set out to make 12 megapixels affordable, but the EasyShare Z1275 is just cheap. A decent lens and HD video capability is hamstrung by a lack of features, slow performance and shocking battery life.

Editor's rating:5.6 User rating:6.8
  • Good: Decent zoom lens • HD video
  • Bad: Terrible zoom rocker • Subpar screen • No optical image stabilisation • Terrible battery life
  • Specs: Digital compact • 12.4 megapixels • 2.5 inch • 5 x • See more specifications
  • RRP: AU$399.00

The Kodak EasyShare Z1275 is an attempt to bring 12 megapixels to the masses. It's essentially a higher resolution version of the 8-megapixel Z885, and at AU$3990 is certainly affordable. We found that the Z1275 is an impressive camera in many ways, but you get what you pay for in other areas.

Design
Somehow the two-tone grey and black colour scheme gives the Z1275 a more grown-up feel than its blocky, plasticky, toy-like styling would otherwise evoke. As with most AA battery-powered compacts, it's a brick of a camera, but at least there's plenty to hold on to.

As usual, there's a 2.5-inch LCD screen, but the 115k pixel resolution is subpar. This is most noticeable when using the manual focus option, which magnifies the image to check focus. Unusually, the black buttons are rice-grain oblongs, and the rear clickpad is square. We thought at first the OK button was a mini joystick, but it's actually just annoyingly loose.

Features
The best feature of the Z1275 is its 5x zoom. The f/2.8-5.1 Schneider-Kreuznach Variogon lens is let down, however, by the lack of optical image stabilisation.

Optical image stabilisation is a glaring omission, especially in a camera sold on its telephoto abilities. This is because long zooms magnify the effects of camera shake. Newer cameras should really have this feature as standard. Face detection is also absent, but we didn't really miss it.

The usual Kodak bells and whistles are present and correct, including 20 scene modes, a favourites mode and panorama stitch function. Video mode shoots 1,280x768-pixel resolution at 30 frames per second, making the footage interlaced HD video. Unusually the zoom lens can be used during video. The manual exposure mode is misleadingly named, however, as it includes only three available aperture settings. The shutter's maximum speed is just 1/1,000 second.

Performance and Image quality
In decent lighting conditions, the Z1275 is a very capable camera. Colour reproduction is rich and vivid. The automatic white balance does a good job, and we managed some decent pictures with barely any purple fringing. The lens, despite lacking optical image stabilisation, produced no discernable distortion.

Sadly, that's as good it gets. When the light fades, the Z1275's flaws become glaringly apparent. Noise is a problem even as fast as ISO 100. The high ISO mode, ostensibly for low-light shooting, is as useless as on most compacts. The severely limited manual options don't give anywhere near enough scope to manage noise and exposure issues.

We also found that the metering could be erratic, sometimes leading to underexposed pictures. This was a problem when photographing high-contrast shots in bright sunlight, with the camera's limited dynamic range losing detail in darker areas.

Image quality aside, the Z1275 disappoints in other areas. Battery life is frustrating, eating two sets of AA batteries during our week of testing.

Startup is also slow, taking about four seconds, with a similar gap between shots.

We tested the Z1275 with a SanDisk Extreme III and a PNY SDHC memory card, but even with high-performance cards it could take up to ten seconds to process images. Continuous mode is particularly limp in this regard, capturing only three images -- just about managing 1 frame per second -- and then taking 10 seconds to write them to memory.

This poor performance is despite heavy compression that reduces file size, and should make processing quicker. It also leads to compression artefacts, though.

The Kodak EasyShare Z1275 has a respectable lens and plenty of potential, but is let down by excessive corner-cutting. Features such as optical image stabilisation are sorely missed, while the poor screen and plasticky build scream of a camera bodged up on the cheap. If you're desperate for an affordable high-resolution point-and-shoot, the 10-megapixel Pentax Optio A30 is a better bet.

Topics: kodak, easyshare, Z1275, 12 megapixels, digital camera, camera, stabilise, lens, image, optical

Comments (6)

  • EDO gave 7/10 on 14/06/2009 20:04 Report abuse

    • Good: Z1285: Decent zoom in stabiliser mode, HD video, picture & panoramic stitching.
    • Bad: Terrible HD video rocker, battery life, sub bar screen.

    Z1285:
    Decent zoom in stabiliser mode.
    Decent HD video.
    Decent picture.
    Decent panoramic stitching.
    Terrible HD video rocker.
    Terrible battery life.
    Terrible Subpar screen.

  • Upset in US gave 2/10 on 03/07/2008 19:08 Report abuse

    Batch Modes doesn't function on device. Never more than 20 minutes of battery ife on brand new batteries. This thing is going back to the store ASAP!

  • james2k50 gave 7/10 on 30/03/2008 14:54 Report abuse

    • Good: Very good to excellent image quality!
      HD Video is unsurpassed.
      Color is unsurpassed which is the reason why I purchased another Kodak.
      5X optical zoom is more than enough for a compact camera "in my opinion".
      Panoramic stitching is stunning! It takes three pictures in tandem and joins them together seamlessly. This can all be done handheld!
      Full manual control.
      One more good thing is 2 firmware revisions have corrected some issues :-)
    • Bad: ISO above 800 is terrible.
      In a shot to shot perspective this camera is a little slow. This might improve with a faster SD card.

    Photography is one of my favorite hobbies and I enjoy learning about it. With that being said I decided to purchase another camera just recently. I gave my Z612 to my wife since her old Fuji finally died. She absolutely loves the Z612 and especially the Kodak color. It is for this reason that I purchased another Kodak because their colors are unsurpassed.

    As for the new camera, I bought the compact Z1275 so that I wouldn't have to carry my large Sony DSLR all the time.

    When I made the Z1275 purchase a couple of days ago I noticed the Z885 was the same price. I bought Z1275 on "special" and figured the Z885 was identical but with fewer megapixels. Then I wondered why the Z1275 was so cheap. I thought that perhaps there was something wrong with it. I purchased this camera for $186.97 plus tax.

    I have already taken over 200 pictures and find the IQ quite good. But higher ISOs are a problem and anything above 800 is really grainy and in my opinion becomes unusable. For this reason I cannot give IQ an excellent rating but very good indeed.

    For the money the video and especially HD is nothing short of amazing! There is no stutter in the video or noise from the motor/lens zooming in and out. It does lose focus briefly but regains just as quick. However if you don't use a tripod there's going to be a lot of jitter especially with HD video.

    I have heard bad things about the 1275. For the most part it's from users that complain about the camera being slow or too much noise/grainy pictures. I rarely use anything but manual/p mode so I know how to deal with the noise. I wonder sometimes how competent the people are that use this camera. It is much than I expected, especially for the price. Also there are many who love the camera and are producing excellent pictures.

    I do notice it is a little slow from a shot to shot perspective but again the image quality is very good as long as I stay away from ISOs higher than 800.

  • dejjar gave 9/10 on 18/01/2008 02:49 Report abuse

    • Good: it's the best h-slr camera till producing better
    • Bad: macro mode is not good. i wish it was be 1 cm. maybe 3.. but ...(

    the best camera among compact models. lens is perfect, and you can zoom while video recording.. also 1280*720 video recording designed for making holywood film :P

  • litesong gave 7/10 on 31/12/2007 20:39 Report abuse

    • Good: Video is superb with good sound. Never used video & already have videos to cherish. Will not have to apologize for video image quality even in the future. Stitch mode for panoramics is stunning. Can easily & SEAMLESSLY stitch panoramics using 3 handheld pix. Good for eliminating bad top image quality. However, stitching 3 pix together doesn't give 12MP times 3=36 MPs. Three stitched pix still only give 12MP pix in a 6500+ by 1850+ pixel aray.
      Good color, superb resolution except as noted. Unlike review, my exposures are superlative.
    • Bad: Image quality not even on top as compared to center & bottom. No optical stabilization tho implied with the word stabilization. Deceptive PR. No optical viewing. Manual instructions are terrible. May hint at camera capabilities, but you can easily overlook them because readings are not detailed.

    My Schneider lens give fine central & lower resolution, but it has decentering effects by showing more color fringing & lower resolution in higher parts of horizontal pix. Still pix are good...except when comparing to Canon A650! In contrast the video is wonderful. You must carefully zoom tho, or video goes out of focus while zooming. Surprisingly, not all zooms went out of focus. Terribly disappointed by lack of image stabilization, except for laughably raising the ISO. Kodak said the camera had it. False advertising. Use of lithium AA batteries really helps battery life. Four gigabyte card stores 1000+still images or 1 hour video in 2 separate shots. Too much over compression.

  • bearcrm gave 9/10 on 27/10/2007 09:31 Report abuse

    • Good: nice camera
    • Bad: never thought I would buy a kodak camera

    fun,easy to use,lots of opitions,great pictures and a good price for 12 megapixals.

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