




📷 Elevate your everyday photography—zoom, shoot, and share like a pro!
The Canon PowerShot SX150 IS is a compact, lightweight digital camera featuring a 14.1 MP CCD sensor and a powerful 12x wide-angle optical zoom with image stabilization. Its large 3.0-inch LCD screen and intelligent shooting modes make capturing high-quality photos and HD videos effortless. Powered by convenient AA batteries, it’s perfect for professionals and enthusiasts who want reliable performance and flexibility on the go.
| ASIN | B005I6DVLQ |
| Age Range Description | Adult |
| Aperture modes | F3.4-F5.6 |
| Are Batteries Included | Yes |
| Aspect Ratio | 16:9 |
| Auto Focus Technology | Center, Contrast Detection, Face Detection, Live View, Multi-area, Single, Tracking |
| Autofocus | Yes |
| Autofocus Points | 9 |
| Battery Weight | 15 Grams |
| Best Sellers Rank | #119,220 in Electronics ( See Top 100 in Electronics ) #983 in Digital Point & Shoot Cameras |
| Bit Depth | 8 Bit |
| Brand | Canon |
| Camera Flash | Built-In |
| Camera Lens | A 12x wide-angle optical zoom lens with a 28mm focal length and optical image stabilization, providing a 336mm maximum focal length |
| Color | Red |
| Compatible Devices | Devices with USB port or USB data transfer compatibility |
| Compatible Mountings | Canon EF |
| Connectivity Technology | USB |
| Continuous Shooting | 0.9 |
| Customer Reviews | 4.0 out of 5 stars 180 Reviews |
| Digital Scene Transition | zoom |
| Digital Zoom | 4 |
| Digital-Still | Yes |
| Display Fixture Type | Fixed |
| Display Resolution Maximum | 230,000 |
| Display Type | LCD |
| Dots Per Screen | High (proportional to 230,000) |
| Dynamic Stops | 10 Stops |
| Effective Still Resolution | 14.1 |
| Expanded ISO Maximum | 1600 |
| Expanded ISO Minimum | 80 |
| Exposure Control | Automatic |
| File Format | JPEG, RAW |
| Flash Memory Bus Interface Type | SD |
| Flash Memory Type | SD/SDHC/SDXC |
| Flash Modes | [Auto, On, Off, Slow Synch, Rear Curtain Synch] |
| Focal Length Description | Canon PowerShot SX150 IS 14.1 MP Digital Camera with 12x Wide-Angle Optical Image |
| Focus Features | TTL |
| Focus Mode | Continuous-Servo AF (AF-C), Single-Servo AF (AF-S) |
| Focus Type | Autofocus & Manual |
| Form Factor | Compact |
| Global Trade Identification Number | 00013803140576 |
| Hardware Interface | PictBridge |
| Has Color Screen | Yes |
| Image Capture Type | Stills & Video |
| Image Stabilization | Optical |
| Image stabilization | Optical |
| Item Weight | 10.72 ounces |
| JPEG Quality Level | Fine |
| Lens Type | zoom |
| Manufacturer | Canon Cameras US |
| Maximum Aperture | 5.6 f |
| Maximum Focal Length | 336 Millimeters |
| Maximum Shutter Speed | 1/2500 Seconds |
| Metering Methods | Multi, Center-weighted, Spot |
| Minimum Focal Length | 28 Millimeters |
| Minimum Shutter Speed | 15 seconds |
| Model Name | Canon PowerShot SX150 IS |
| Model Number | 5663B001 |
| Model Series | SX |
| Movie Mode | Yes |
| Night vision | No |
| Optical Zoom | 12 x |
| Photo Sensor Resolution | 14.1 MP |
| Photo Sensor Size | 1/2.3-inch |
| Photo Sensor Technology | CCD |
| Real Angle Of View | 12 Degrees |
| Remote Included | No |
| Screen Size | 3 Inches |
| Self Timer | 10 Seconds |
| Sensor Type | CCD |
| Series Number | 150 |
| Shooting Modes | Automatic |
| Skill Level | Professional |
| Special Feature | Lightweight |
| Supported File Format | JPEG, RAW |
| Supported Image Format | JPEG, CR2 |
| Total Still Resolution | 14.1 MP |
| Total USB 2.0 Ports | 1 |
| Total USB Ports | 1 |
| Touch Screen Type | Capacitive |
| UPC | 013803140576 |
| Video Capture Format | AVC |
| Video Output | USB |
| Video Resolution | HD 720p |
| Viewfinder | Electronic |
| Warranty Description | 1 year limited warranty |
| White Balance Settings | Auto |
| Wireless Technology | EyeFi |
| Write Speed | 9 MB/s |
| Zoom | Optical |
K**E
Awesome Camera
Wow. This Canon PowerShot SX150IS is great. I had a Kodak Easy Share V705 practially from the day it hit the market, which I'd used and loved for all the years I owned it ... small, convenient to carry in a pocket, produced great photos, and lots of capabilities (enlarge/crop/lighten/darken/etc). Then one day last Fall while on a trip, the camera quit - shutter problem and staying charged problem. All comments I read indicated other owners of same camera with same problem had virtually no luck correcting the problem, short of sending it to the company for "costly" repair. So .... I went hunting for a new camera instead. I researched User comments, quality write-ups, etc. and decided on the Canon PowerShot SX150IS, which I purchased from Amazon. I have not been disappointed. Great value; good price. I am still in learning process with all the many, many features. Photo quality is superb. Negatives for me: Camera is too large to fit in my pocket, and I purchased a camera case that turned out to be too small - don't know if Amazon would exchange the case for a larger one; I did not notify Amazon. Regardless of that mistake, I am happy with the camera.
J**N
The best AA battery field use point-and-shoot available anywhere.
The new Canon SX 150 camera should probably be subtitled, "Possibly The Best All-Around, Point-And-Shoot, Off-Road-Adventure Camera - Affordable - for the Average Person Today." I recently bought this camera, the SX 150 HS, and I also have owned/used the earlier models in this same line for several years now - the SX 110, SX 120, and SX 130 - so I have several years experience with it, all of it very positive. Yes, it runs on AA batteries, but that is the GOOD NEWS! If you don't like that, then buy one of the 100 other cameras available that don't use them. Use some form of proprietary lithium-ion battery instead which will set you back $25 to $75 apiece for each spare battery, and it will not even last two functioning years. You will also need several of those batteries for any extended trip, and when you buy your next camera they won't fit it, so you can then just throw away that extra $100 to $200 in useless, expensive, non-interchangeable batteries. Now if you are an average person who doesn't HAVE an extra $100 to $200 to throw away every couple of years on proprietary batteries that only fit one camera, then please read on. This is the LAST REMAINING, top quality, 2-AA battery, point-and-shoot camera left on the market, people. There are some very good economical reasons to PREFER that choice. Anywhere you travel, you can ALWAYS buy - or borrow - AA batteries to keep it going. The AA batteries are about as universal an item as exists on the planet, so you can still keep shooting this camera almost anywhere you go. But you absolutely should use rechargeable AAs whenever you can to save money - a LOT of money. And they last much longer on each charge. I get about 350 large JPEG photos per charged set, and since I sometimes shoot a lot of photos in one place, I always carry at least two pairs of backup batteries to swap out. &&&&&&& UPDATE EDIT: In Dec. 2011, I bought my first few sets of Sanyo eneloop AA rechargeable batteries. Since then I have used them very, very successfully in this camera. On a recent field trip to the local mountains near Monterey, CA, I set out with a fully-charged pair of eneloop AA batteries in the SX150, and I carried a backup pair of eneloop AAs just in case. I did a full day of shooting with 425 full-sized JPEGs and 8 minutes of HD video, and I used a lot of zoom and frequently turned the camera off and on too. That is a LOT of battery use for one set of AA batteries. The batteries finally ran out early the next day as I was testing some of the features on the camera. It is my understanding that it costs less than 1 cent apiece in household current to recharge them each time, and that they are guaranteed to recharge at least 1500 times. And they are also supposed to hold about 70% of their full charge even after three years just sitting on a shelf! (Unlike the older style of rechargeable AA batteries that lost their charge fairly quickly.) Since they last at least 2 to 3 times as long as standard alkaline batteries on each charge, that would represent a total savings of at least $1500 (fifteen hundred dollars) over the cost of buying 3000 alkaline batteries on sale at only 50 cents apiece FOR EACH PAIR OF AA ENELOOP BATTERIES that you would use on any other household devices in your own home. Don't think of them as just being for use in a camera. They work in everything requiring AA batteries. Flashlights, computer mice, remotes (they make them in AAA too), children's toys, shop tools, wall clocks or anything else you might use them for in your home. They sell for about $20 on Amazon for an 8-pack of them. That represents a savings of about $6000 over the 1500 cycle lifetime of each 8-pack of eneloop batteries you buy and use instead of regular alkaline batteries. Do the math yourself and you will be astounded by how many thousands of dollars they can save you around your home over a period of 5, 10 or even 20 years. BTW - As a special note. The "low battery" light comes on in the SX150 camera long before the batteries are actually dead. That is because the SX150 is calibrated for 1.5 volt alkaline AA batteries. The Sanyo eneloop AA rechargeable batteries only recharge to about 1.2 volts or 1.3 volts at most. The camera "thinks" they are low because it looks for a low voltage to decide that. Some cameras do have a menu item to change the battery check away from alkaline batteries (at 1.5 volts) to rechargeable batteries (at 1.2 or 1.3 volts), but I don't think the SX150 gives you that option. Just keep using them until they actually do run out and you will be surprised at how long they really do last. Best wishes to all, - John &&&&&&&& Regular alkaline batteries don't last long, and are obviously WAY too expensive to use in any AA battery camera for more than very occasional shooting. That is printed right in the instruction manual. Honestly, you are just supposed to know that fact ahead of time. You only use alkaline batteries in emergencies when you simply run out of the extra recharged ones you are carrying with you and you find yourself in a tight spot. Later on when you buy your next camera, you can transfer those same AA batteries to it without spending a dime buying a single new, proprietary lithium-ion battery in the whole process. Rechargeable AA batteries are unbelievably cheaper in the long run - and much better for the environment - if you add up all of the costs and waste involved in going through one new set of proprietary lithium-ion batteries after another as the years go by. That is probably this camera's best, preferred, long-term feature, but by no means its only good feature. It is also very light weight and compact. It will not fit in your shirt pocket, but it is not supposed to. Your shirt pocket is where your cell phone goes with its own built-in camera. The slightly larger and heavier (and much better image quality) Canon SX 130 or SX 150 will fit easily into your coat pocket, travel bag, or purse, which is where it belongs, anyway. Should you buy the new SX 150 if you already have an SX 130? That depends on you, but especially on whether you want a backup camera with you when you go out on a photo shoot. On my most recent trip I took my older SX 120 camera with me as a backup. I don't want to be out in the wilderness with no backup camera, and the best backup camera is the one closest to my current camera as possible. On my next trip I will take my SX 150 and my SX 130 will become my new backup camera. Now I will sell my older SX 120, which still works fine after three years, to somebody else who understands the reliable and cost-effective value of having a good 2-AA point-and-shoot camera. That has been my experience with the whole Canon SX 100+ Power Shot line over the last several years now, and it has all been very positive. I hope this review may help others who may not have seen some of this economical, common sense information discussed in this way before. Best wishes and good photo results to all. UPDATE: There is at least one other important option with the SX 150 that I have not really described here in my original post, but since it is a generally affordable one it deserves some serious consideration. It is the option my wife and I personally chose and have used with wonderful success together through the SX120, SX130 and now the SX150 model cameras. You can buy 2 - Canon SX150s, for the price of 1 - Canon SX40. (We do actually own an SX40, too, but we have found we rarely use it except for super-long 35X telephoto shots. It is just too cumbersome for us to carry around with us most of the time in it's separate camera bag.) My wife carries one SX150 with her, I carry the other. (She chose a black one, I wanted a red one!) At least one of us ALWAYS has at least one of those two SX150 cameras with us at all times. Together we get more good shots that way and under a wider variety of circumstances than either of us would separately. And we teach each other new techniques with the camera. If I figure out a new manual setting, I teach it to her. She may discover a new camera angle that had not occurred to me to try. We have found that when we shoot the very same field trip together we shoot different things because we zero in on different things. We complement each other's photography, and that has been an even more fulfilling experience for us personally to share together. Again best wishes, John
J**S
LOVE THIS CAMERA!!!
This camera is great! A co-worker and I each bought this camera and we love it. She just got back from Mexico and all of the pictures were beautiful! The colors and the clarity of each image is amazing. I also love the fish eye effects-the pictures you can come up with are so entertaining. My favorite things also include the automatic function that will take a self portrait when it sees a smile, and the fact that it takes AA batteries. Nothing is better when traveling than being able to use regualar batteries that are readily available almost everywhere. There's nothing worse than having to recharge a battery when you're out and about and won't be near a plug-in until evening. I always use the Energizer max battieries. I was able to go to Europe and use only 2 sets of those while taking over 1400 pictures. Just keep an extra set or 2 with you and you're always ready to roll. Both me and my co-worker will be heading to Vegas in 2 weeks and I'm so excited to be able to see what kind of pictures we can get there!
E**F
Great camera but...
Love this camera. Takes wonderful crisp and color accurate photos. But, somehow, dust has found it's way into the inside of the lens (although the camera is handled carefully and kept in a case when not in use). Contacted Canon to find out if the camera can be sent in for cleaning and was told that they don't do that. Canon will be happy to give me a certain amount of credit for an upgrade to a better camera, but they don't find it cost effective to take the time to clean the insides of this model. It infuriates me to think of how wasteful this company is because here I am now stuck with a perfectly functional camera that I love to use and cannot use because it's not "worth" it to them to clean it. Absolutely ridiculous!!! I'm pretty handy, but viewing the online video of how to take this camera apart for service is waaaaaay too complicated even for me. Besides, taking a piece of optical equipment apart in anything but a totally dust free environment would only make the problem worse. It needs professional service and that service is unavailable.
H**4
Great pictures, slow flash, battery eater!
I bought this to replace a 4MP camera, and the difference in picture quality is immediately evident. This camera takes really nice pictures! On the "easy" setting, it's a very simple, very reliable point-and-shoot camera. The two drawbacks of this camera are the slow flash and the battery life. The flash needs to "charge," which sometimes takes as long as 5-6 seconds. Try catching your kids playing with a 5 second delay--pretty difficult! Also, it EATS batteries. I haven't had a pair of AAs last longer than two sessions of about 20 pictures each and maybe a 1 minute video. I haven't tried rechargeable batteries yet, but at this rate, they're probably worth it. I like the camera, and I can live with the drawbacks. Just be aware--especially for the delayed pictures in low light.
A**R
Great features in theory but impossible to use.
I almost gave it two stars, but if you cannot use a camera and send it back (and have said "I hate this camera" several times), then it only gets one star. Batteries (brand new rechargeable eneloop batteries) got chewed up with moderate use. Really, if you went somewhere you might take a lot of pictures over a full day, you might need two sets of backup batteries. Half the time when you want to snap a picture at night, the camera isn't ready because it says "flash charging." My other cameras never did that -- and two of them have been Cannons. Also the camera was way too bulky. And, if you use any mode other than "Auto," it will not give you the option of any auto-review of the picture you just took. You have to manually call it up. Maybe there was a way to change this setting (it was dimmed in my options), but I never found it, and I didn't try very hard when I decided the rest of the issues made the camera not for me.
M**1
Disappointed
After the lens cover breaking on my Kodak easyshare, I was looking for a straightforward point and shoot digital camera with higher pixels and zoom. While I was happy with the quality of photos this camera could take, I was not at all pleased with the functionality of it. The camera itself is a bit bulky, which may turn some people off. Secondly, the camera takes awhile to power up - which annoyed me right off the bat. Once on, the menus are not very intuitive. There is too much scrolling through multiple menus. I imagine that with practice, it would be easy to navigate, but it certainly isn't straight out of the box. Lastly, and most disappointing for me was the flash situation. The flash didn't fire automatically in auto mode. Instead, there is a message on the screen "Raise the flash" which prompts you to manually raise the flash cover. So, ok, I thought, just keep the flash up at all times. Unfortunately, after firing the flash takes several seconds to charge. This makes it very difficult and frustrating to take consecutive shots that require a flash. With kids, those moments don't always wait for the flash to be ready. While the camera may take nice pictures, it just seems slow and not user-friendly. As much as I was excited to receive this camera, I sadly had to return it in search of a quicker more adaptable replacement.
N**O
Dependable with multiple capabilities.
Had a Canon Powershot SX120 IS 10MP before and totally loved it. After moisture damage I had to replace it. Tried some other brand cameras and none really compared to the dependability and capabilities of the Canon SX120 IS 10 MP. After returning a couple of other brand cameras decided to purchase the latest Canon Powershot SX150 14.1 MP. I am loving the dependability of this camera too. Takes clear shots. Has many many settings to choose from. You can go all auto or make your own manual changes. Love the video. For a little hand held camera it has great video performance. The button features of my previous model are very similar with this one so I didn't have to learn too many new button features. Although this one has a few more fun features to play with as a bonus. The size of the camera is perfect. Very small for the features it has. You can carry it in your purse or small camera bag. Other reviews complain about batteries. That is nonsense! If all you can complain on a camera is its battery usage and all of its capabilities are great then why not buy it. LOVE, LOVE, LOVE the great pictures you can get. Totally recommend this camera.
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