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Canon PowerShot SD300 Digital Elph

 & Sean Carroll Managing Editor, Software

Our team tests, rates, and reviews more than 1,500 products each year to help you make better buying decisions and get more from technology.

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 - Canon PowerShot SD300 Digital Elph
4.0 Excellent

The Bottom Line

The Canon PowerShot SD300 Digital Elph takes great pictures, despite its tiny size. It's stylish, built like a very small tank, and fun to use.

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Pros & Cons

    • Excellent daylight images and very good flash shots.
    • Good menus.
    • Tiny and tough.
    • Mediocre recycle times.
    • Smallish LCD, Optical viewfinder placement could be better.

Canon PowerShot SD300 Digital Elph Specs

35-mm Equivalent (Telephoto): 105 mm
35-mm Equivalent (Wide): 35 mm
Battery Type Supported: Lithium Ion
LCD size: 2 inches
Media Format: Secure Digital
Megapixels: 4 MP
Type: Ultracompact

The Canon PowerShot SD300 Digital Elph is only a 4MP camera with a 2 inch LCD in an ultracompact space increasingly dominated by 5MP contenders with 2.5 inch LCDs—but that's okay, because this tough, tiny camera punches well above its weight. Superb picture quality more than make up for its sluggish flash recycle times, making this our new Editors' Choice ultracompact camera.

Available in the same range of colors as its fixed focal-length cousin the SD20, the SD300 has a bigger LCD, at 2 inches, and adds a retractable f/2.8-f/4.9 5.8mm to 17.4mm (35mm to 105mm, 35mm equivalent) 3X optical zoom lens that retracts into the body of the camera when not in use. It also adds an optical viewfinder, though we wish this were placed to the side; placing it further in toward the center of the camera means that people with small noses will put them right on the LCD and people with big noses will have trouble using the viewfinder at all. Still, most people frame shots with the LCD, and while this camera's display isn't the biggest, it's crisp and bright. The SD300 has the same menus as the SD20, which, while not quite up to the standards we observed in the Casio ultracompacts, are still very good. We also like the fact that it shoots 640x480 video at 30 FPS, something recently reviewed higher-end Canons, such as the PowerShot S70 and G6, do not.

Where the SD300 really excels, however, is in testing. It got a very respectable 1225 average lines of resolution (compare to the previous Editors' Choice, the 5MP Sony Cyber-shot DSC-T1, which only scored 1150 lines), which, while not as good as the 5MP Casio Exilim EX-Z55, is still impressive, and the best of the 4MP ultracompacts. Pixel transition was a fairly good 2.5%. It boots up quickly enough, at 1.8 seconds, second only to the Sony T1 among ultracompacts, but while it's fairly fast shot-to-shot without flash, it takes a full 5.5 sec-onds between flash exposures, which is quite slow.

Still, the images it takes that long to process are well worth any wait. The daylight shots show excellent colors and dynamic range, with good contrast and rich detail, from the shadows to the highlights. The flash shots aren't quite as outstanding, but still very appealing, with good exposure if somewhat uneven illumination. The contrast was excellent and the color hues were very good, though there were no true whites in the shot. The picture was very sharp, with good details.

The SD300 is a keeper; aside from a slow flash, there's not much to complain about. If you need a faster camera, try the Casio EX-Z55, but otherwise, this is our ultracompact of choice.

Benchmark Test
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Final Thoughts

 - Canon PowerShot SD300 Digital Elph

Canon PowerShot SD300 Digital Elph

4.0 Excellent

The Canon PowerShot SD300 Digital Elph takes great pictures, despite its tiny size. It's stylish, built like a very small tank, and fun to use.

Get It Now

Buy It Now

About Our Expert

Sean Carroll

Sean Carroll

Managing Editor, Software

I’m PCMag.com’s managing editor for software and services. The team of analysts I lead covers—among many other beats— security, productivity, and software for creatives. We test, analyze, and write reviews of antivirus software, VPNs, productivity apps, project management services, video editing suites, photo editing software, and digital audio workstations, among other tools.

I’ve been an editor at PCMag.com since 1999, back when it was printed on paper and called PC Magazine, in Manhattan. Before that, I edited a magazine that covered electronic warfare in Massachusetts, and before that I edited a travel magazine in Tokyo. All told, that’s about 30 years of experience, about 25 of it covering technology. 

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