Olympus X-890 Tunbridge Wells

With silver lines that break up the matt black body, Olympus X-890 available in Tunbridge Wells is like a piece of abstract minimalist art. It sounds less pleasant than it looks, though, and makes a high-pitched beep when any button is pressed.

Paul Barsby Photography
+44 (0) 1892 523134
159 Camden Road
Tunbridge Wells
Snappy Snaps
+44 (0) 1892 522455
86 Mount Pleasant Road
Tunbridge Wells
Kodak Express Photo 60
+44 (0) 1732 361607
60 High Street
Tonbridge
Stephen Mallaby Photography
+44 (0) 1342 321493
14 Railway Approach
East Grinstead
SMS Creative Photography
+44 (0) 1883 722282
83 Station Road East
Oxted
Venture
+44 (0) 1892 557711
30-32 Camden Road
Tunbridge Wells
Mirror Image Photography
+44 (0) 1892 614990
113-115 Camden Road
Tunbridge Wells
The Studio
+44 (0) 1342 321493
14 Railway Approach
East Grinstead
Hamilton Studios
+44 (0) 1342 323066
15 High Street
East Grinstead
7 Oaks Photography
+44 (0) 1732 742929
48 Holly Bush Lane
Sevenoaks
Data Provided by:
 
Provided By:

Olympus X-890

The X-890 doesn't slot neatly into Olympus's established Stylish, Easy or Creative ranges of digital compacts, and doesn't even appear on the company's website. It's exclusive to Jessops, and you'll find further details on the retailer's website.

We love the design. With silver lines that break up the matt black body, it's like a piece of abstract minimalist art. It sounds less pleasant than it looks, though, and makes a high-pitched beep when any button is pressed. Thankfully, you can turn this off. At the back there's a 2.7in screen and a basic smattering of controls. Photographic options are limited, with no continuous drive, metering or autofocus options. Flash settings, exposure compensation, ISO speed and white balance presets are available, but only in the Program mode, not iAuto.

The camera uses slow, expensive xD cards, although it comes with a microSD-to-xD adaptor. However, performance was poor even with a fast microSD card. Autofocus was slow and prone to failing in low light, and we measured an average of 4.3 seconds between shots. We suspect that the lack of a continuous mode is due to the fact that it would have been embarrassingly slow.

Image quality was just as disappointing. Even outdoor shots taken in bright sunlight exhibited vague details, blotchy colours in shade and a skewed white balance. We can't remember the last camera we saw that struggled with white balance in sunlight. There was also purple fringing around dark subjects set against a bright background, such as trees against the sky. The camera chose inappropriate ISO speeds in low light, resulting in blurry shots indoors without the flash. We had to change the ISO speed manually or switch to the Stabilisation mode, but this is something that most casual photographers won't think to do.

The X-890 looks smart, but there's no other reason to choose it over Panasonic's cheaper LS85.

System Specifications

10 megapixels (3,648x2,736 pixels), 3x optical zoom (36-108mm), xD slot (19MB internal), rechargeable Li-ion battery, 57x94x21mm, 108g, one-year RTB warranty

Verdict

Stylish design isn't sufficient to compensate for this camera's poor image quality and performance.

Author: Ben Pitt

Olympus X-890