Get all your news in one place.
100’s of premium titles.
One app.
Start reading
Digital Camera World
Digital Camera World
Rod Lawton

Canon's V10 might be basic, but I love that it's a camera that dares to be DIFFERENT

Canon PowerShot V10

The new Canon PowerShot V10 is a bit of an odd sort of camera that’s no larger than a cigarette packet, has a fixed focal length 18mm/19mm equivalent lens and a flip-up/fold-back screen for filming a subject in the normal way or filming yourself.

It has a 1-inch sensor, so should be a useful step up from smartphone quality, yet costs only half as much as the best camera phones out there right now. The controls are pretty simplistic, and the only zooming is digital, but it’s designed for simple vlogging use – and that’s the point. It has actually been designed for this. It’s not an adaptation of an existing camera.

Which is where I find the also-new Sony ZV-1 II a bit of a disappointment. It’s essentially a refresh of the earlier Sony ZV-1 with a wider lens for easier selfie vlogging. We liked the original ZV-1, but it was itself clearly a light reskin of Sony’s existing RX100 cameras – and now Sony has reskinned the reskin.

If you want the best camera for vlogging, the Sony ZV-1 II appears the best on paper. But whatever the Canon's technical limitations, if you put the PowerShot V10 side by side with the ZV-1 II, the difference in the design effort is obvious. Canon has made a new camera, Sony has refreshed an old one. And, to be honest, it’s getting increasingly difficult to tell the difference between Sony’s multitude of vlogging cameras, many of which share the same core technologies and designs.

The Canon PowerShot V10 looks like it was made for vlogging. The Sony ZV-1 II looks like a regular camera adapted for vlogging. (Image credit: Sony )

How many physically similar RX100 cameras were there (seven, we counted) and these have spawned three equally similar ZV-1 cameras. The only things to change have been the viewfinder (dropped from the ZV-1 series) and the lenses (two for the RX100 series and a choice of three for the ZV-1, ZV-1F and ZV-1 II).

Let’s not even start on its big brother, the ZV-E1, which gets much of its tech from the A7S I, II and III which also spawned the FX-3 and to a degree the FX6. And then there’s the ZV-E10 which is essentially an A6000-series camera with a flip-out screen and no viewfinder.

When is Sony going to design a new camera? New as in physically and technically new, not new as in market segmentation?

Canon has also been guilty of recycling camera designs plenty in the past, but at least the PowerShot V10 is genuinely new. It’s also very distinctive, with a simple but effective design that you ‘get’ straight away. It's not going to be one of the best cameras for video from a technical standpoint, but as a piece of design it seems to me a really refreshing departure.

Or am I the only one who thinks camera design has stagnated?

Sign up to read this article
Read news from 100’s of titles, curated specifically for you.
Already a member? Sign in here
Related Stories
Top stories on inkl right now
One subscription that gives you access to news from hundreds of sites
Already a member? Sign in here
Our Picks
Fourteen days free
Download the app
One app. One membership.
100+ trusted global sources.