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ISO comparison The Elph 300 HS produces generally excellent snapshots. Photos do get softer and noisier above ISO 200-typical for point-and-shoots-but ISO 400 and 800 are still very usable. The noise and noise reduction are well balanced so you still get good color and detail at these higher sensitivities. Colors desaturate some at ISO 1,600 and 3,200, subjects look very soft, and detail is greatly diminished. While you might not want to view them or heavily crop them, the high-ISO results should be satisfactory for Web or prints at small sizes. Compared with a camera with a similar sensor and lens, the Elph 300 HS may have a slight edge, but it really depends on your needs and expectations. Both drop off in quality at ISO 400.
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The Sony's noise is slightly better, but its reduction smears details; the Canon is noisier, but it retains more detail. Handheld NightScene The high-ISO photos from the 300 HS are very good, but they are noisier. To help with that, Canon offers its Handheld NightScene mode that uses the camera's high-speed sensor and processing to shoot multiple images and overlay them to reduce noise and blur caused by hand shake. Here, the photo on the left was taken in Auto at ISO 800 with the one on the right using the aforementioned mode. Using Auto results in a sharper photo, but with more noise and slightly washed-out color.
The NightScene mode improves color and reduces noise (which is ), but you get softer details. Creative Filters If you want to experiment even more with your photos, Canon's Creative Filters are mixed in with the camera's scene modes. These include a Toy Camera Effect (left from top to bottom: standard, warm, and cool), Monochrome, Super Vivid, and Poster Effect (right from top to bottom). You'll also find Color Accent (scene is monochrome except one user-selectable color), Color Swap (replace one color for another e.g.
Red for yellow), Fish-eye Effect, and Miniature Effect. (Note: These were taken with the, but the 300 HS produces similar results.).