Olympus FE-190

By Will Greenwald, CNET.com on 23 October 2006

If you don't mind the lack of features, Olympus's FE-190 offers pretty pictures and a slim body at a low price.

User rating:7.5
  • Good: Compact • Great white balance • Solid images
  • Bad: Few features • No manual controls
  • Specs: Digital compact • 6 megapixels • 2.5 inch • 3 x • See more specifications
  • RRP: AU$299.00

The FE-190's metal body is thin and pretty. It doesn't have the stylish curves of Olympus's Stylus or Canon's Digital IXUS cameras, but it's still fairly attractive. At just 30.5mm thick and weighing 124 grams, the camera is small enough to squeeze into most pockets. Despite its small size, the FE-190's controls are large and tactile enough, even for large thumbs.

Its list of features is quite short, but the FE-190 still has enough useful settings to please most casual shooters. The camera's 6-megapixel sensor and 38-to-114mm (35mm equivalent) zoom lens are identical to its slightly less expensive little brother, the FE-180. The two cameras share the same scene presets, helpful guide mode, and 30 frame-per-second VGA movie mode. Functionally, the only difference between the two is the FE-190's slim size. The FE-190 also uses a proprietary battery, but since the FE-180 comes with rechargeable AAs, that point is somewhat moot.

The FE-190 automatically sets its sensitivity from ISO 64 to ISO 1,000. Unfortunately, you can't change ISO manually, and since the ISO isn't recorded in the EXIF data, there's no way of knowing what ISO setting the camera is using. It features a digital image stabilisation mode to help reduce blur, but it still isn't very good for low-light shooting, especially if you can't use the flash. Unfortunately, tripod use is extremely awkward, with the camera's plastic tripod mount on the very far left edge of the body's bottom.

For a budget camera, the FE-190 performed well. This little shooter took 2 seconds from power-on to first shot, with a 1.9-second wait for each additional shot. With the flash enabled, shot-to-shot time was 2.8 seconds. The camera's relatively zippy shutter lagged just 0.7 second from button press to shot in bright light, and 1.7 seconds in dim light.

Like other FE-series cameras, the FE-190 has almost no manual controls. Besides macro, flash, and EV compensation, the only way to change the camera's settings is through its various scene presets. It automatically controls aperture, shutter, focus, ISO, and white balance. This isn't necessarily a bad thing, since even running on autopilot, the camera produced some very attractive pictures.

Colours were rich and saturated and stayed accurate even in indoor lighting. Some automatic white balances yielded severely yellow photos under incandescent light, but the FE-190 managed to produce a very neutral and even image in our tungsten-lit lab. We noticed some lens distortion at the widest end of the zoom lens, but nothing that would seriously damage an image. Unfortunately, the camera's lack of ISO settings prevented us from running our standard noise tests, though as can be expected, images shot without flash in low light tended to be rather noisy. Other than noise, the biggest problem the FE-190's photos faced were some processing artifacts that softened details, but even they were negligible.

The Olympus FE-190 excels as a budget, ultracompact snapshot camera. It doesn't have many settings to fiddle with but doesn't really need them, thanks to its well-designed automatic mode. This camera is pocketable, affordable, and a good choice for any user willing to sacrifice control for other boons.

Shooting speed
(Smaller bars indicate better performance)
Typical shot-to-shot time  
Time to first shot  
Shutter lag (typical)  
Olympus FE-140
2.4 
3 
0.7 
Samsung L60
2 
2.1 
0.7 
Olympus FE-180
1.6 
1.7 
0.6 
Sony Cyber Shot DSC-S600
1.3 
1.8 
0.4 
Note: Results are in seconds.

Note: Products in this test are for comparative purposes only and are not necessarily available in the Australian market.

Topics: olympus, digital camera, fe-190, snapshot, 6-megapixel

Comments (13)

  • Barcelus gave a review on 30/12/2009 14:35

    • Good: Compact for take anywhere pics
    • Bad: No manual controls over ISO or shutter speeds

    This is OK for impromptu point n shoot, but no way compares to Nikon F-300 quality in terms of photos. Functions even after getting banged around. It's my throw down and get exposed to the elements camera.

  • Zarrah gave a review on 24/04/2009 22:51

    • Good: Stylish, attractive, very easy to use. Takes great movies.
    • Bad: Picture quality for printing out photographs not very good - very noisy.

    Very comfortable and easy to use. Great for movies and for images that will remain electronic, but images don't print well.

  • I gave 10/10 on 21/06/2008 03:03

    • Good: awesome!
    • Bad: I hope u love urs too!!

    oh u ppl suck this is like the best camera u can get in the buisness! IT IS A VERYY GOOD CAMERA! I WOULD STRONGLY RECOMEND IT AND DONT LISTEN TO THE PPL BELOW ME! THEY R WAYYY WRONG!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!

  • anonymous gave 2/10 on 16/04/2007 00:24

    • Good: nice design. Good macro mode, solid zoom.
    • Bad: Bad photo qulaity in general. Blur corners. Colors without life.

    Cheap but fancy. Much older Olympus c-350 Z (3,2 Mp) makes extremely better pictures

  • German gave 9/10 on 22/03/2007 17:02

    • Good: small, good value, stylish, image stabalization feature works a treat
    • Bad: only 3x optical zoom, photos arnt that good for printing but then again if you want to print photos with exelent quality you would have a much more expencive camera

    nice little camera for what you pay

  • jj gave 2/10 on 30/12/2006 20:53

    • Good: Large lcd screen (Though fuzzy)
      rechargeable battery
    • Bad: Bottom line is that it takes terrible pictures both on your computer screen and printed.

    Looks good, but thats about al

  • daleala gave 4/10 on 23/11/2006 01:17

    • Good: Small, stylish, high megapixels.
    • Bad: No manual control, Pictures can be fuzzy, night shots not too good.

    Small, stylish, cute camera, OK photo quality.

    Unfortunately no manual setting - and you can get a near full manual setting camera for just a small amount more.

  • jimmyb gave 9/10 on 22/11/2006 13:16

    • Good: Excellent size and style.
      Quick start-up.
      Included soft case fits in pocket for safe portability.
      Built in guide extremely useful.
      Pre-set secene modes (10) take out the guesswork of manual settings for novice photographers while providing good results - worthy of mention is the 'self-shot' mode where zoom, ISO, red-eye etc are automatically set to provide impressive results.
      Solid heavy feel.
    • Bad: PictBridge printing not as vivid compared with using PC and printer's software. (Tested on Canon IP500-no image enhancement)
      LCD could be sharpe/brighter.

    Great picture quality and size for the price.
    Extremely pocketable.

  • angelbabe333 gave 10/10 on 15/11/2006 20:09

    • Good: sMall and compact
      Nice features
    • Bad: nothing

    its the best camera ever i love it will never have to get a other one again it

  • Anonymous gave 9/10 on 25/10/2006 22:23

    • Good: small nice. Better Photo quality compare to nikon S6

    After compare the photo quality with Nikon S6, I decided to buy this FE-190.

Post your own

You must read and type the 6 chars within 0..9 and A..F
Submit

Most Popular

Resource Centre Useful content from our premier sponsors

GetPrice Useful content from our premier sponsors

CNET Australia
Compare more prices
Advanced search

Product finder