Canon EOS 100D + 18-55/3.5-5.6 IS STM + 55-250/4.0-5.6 IS
Reviews
Show product page
11 years ago
Canon EOS Rebel SL1 DSLR Review
The EOS Rebel SL1 is an ultra-small SLR system; in fact it is smaller than many bridge cameras and even lighter than many other digital cameras. Nevertheless it's a real SLR system with Canon's APS-C-sized image sensor, which is a little smaller than other APS-C-sized sensors made by Nikon, Sony and...
10 years ago
Canon SL1 Review
There is nothing bad about this little camera. I look at video as a joke feature (no DSLR does it well), and everything else works great. I own and use my 5D Mark III every day, and depend on the 5D Mk III's C1, C2 and C3 memory modes to let me reset my camera instantly for my preferred settings for...
9 years ago
plastic, toy like, expensive
I bought this for a friends birthday. It arrived late, thankyou Littlewoods, I tried to return it, all sorts of problems later, I decided to try it for myself. I usually use NIKON. I found this dslr to be plastic, lightweight and toylike. Not my preference. Although my kids loved it.
12 years ago
Review: Canon EOS 100D - The Most Compact DSLR Till Date
Nowadays entry level DSLRs are priced as much as flagship smartphones. If you want more control over the kind of photographs you take, there are enough DSLR options to pick from. One such camera is the Canon EOS 100D.
Pros:
- Good build quality
- Rich in features
- Lightweight and compact
Cons:
- Expensive
- No Wi-Fi or in-built geo-tagging
- High colour saturation in tone priority mode
12 years ago
Canon EOS 100D Review
Canon was late in entering the mirrorless camera market. When it did come out with the EOS M it faced some flak due to the slow autofocus speed. Although Canon did announce a firmware update to improve the AF speed in June this year, the damage was already done.
11 years ago
Better than the 7D!
This is currently the best crop sensor camera you can buy right now.
Pros:
- Image quality is superb, Loads of familiar features, Full manual control / RAW shooting, Fast
- there's no appreciable lag that I notice yet
Cons:
- Max shutter is 1/4k
- No HSS on the built-in flash
- so can be limiting for fill-flash in bright sun
- Flash compensation limited to +/- 2 stops
10 years ago
Canon Rebel SL1 DSLR Review
My Canon EOS Rebel SL1 review reveals a DSLR camera that does a lot of things well for a smaller than average camera, including good image quality and fast performance levels in viewfinder mode, all at a very good price versus other DSLRs.
12 years ago
Canon took the standard Rebel and whittled it into a smaller body, removing only a few features, while adding one very important one: improved live view autofocus. The result is a mature camera for the family photographer that's not a burden to bring along, but which can also serve as a reliable,...
Pros:
- Very small and light with good grip for small to medium-size hands
- High ISO shots are quite usable
- even above ISO 6400
- Excellent LCD and responsive touchscreen
- Special coating minimizes fingerprint smudges from touchscreen use
- Hybrid AF II / STM lens combo is noticeably improved for live view...
Cons:
- May be too small for those with larger hands
- Grip may be insufficient for use with larger lenses
- AF illuminator integrated into flash (must have flash engaged to use it
- Flash produces red-eye in Night portrait mode
- Non-STM lenses struggle in live view and in movie servo AF
- Default dynamic range...
13 years ago
Canon EOS Rebel SL1 / 100D
The Canon EOS Rebel SL1, or 100D as it's known outside North America, is the company's latest entry-level DSLR and the smallest and lightest model with an APS-C sensor to date. Announced in March 2013, it's arguably the successor to the entry-level EOS Rebel T3 / 1100D and undoubtedly produced in...
Pros:
- World's smallest DSLR
- Truly compact body, Good photo and video quality, 1080p movies with respectable continuous AF, Excellent touch-screen interface, Microphone input, Remote control over USB using PCs or Macs, New kit lens with very quiet AF and non-rotating barrel
Cons:
- Modest continuous shooting speed at 4fps
- No built-in Wifi and no Canon accessory either
- Screen doesn't flip-out
- it's fixed in position
- Basic auto exposure bracketing of three frames
- No auto-panorama mode in-camera
- Non adjustable AF area size in Live View
- Loses size advantage once you fit most...
13 years ago
If you're looking for something which is truly portable, but still retains DSLR-type stylings and operability, take a look at the Panasonic G5 or the newer Panasonic G6
4.4
from 102 reviews
5
38.0%
4
53.0%
3
6.0%
2
0.0%
1
1.0%