Testseek.com have collected 104 expert reviews of the Panasonic Lumix DMC-LX7 and the average rating is 83%. Scroll down and see all reviews for Panasonic Lumix DMC-LX7.
April 2013
(83%)
104 Reviews
Average score from experts who have reviewed this product.
Users
(92%)
430 Reviews
Average score from owners of the product.
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Published: 2012-09-13, Author: Christopher , review by: reviewed.com
Published: 2012-09-13, Author: Christopher , review by: reviewed.com
On paper, you'd expect the Panasonic LX7 to perform as well as or better than its vaunted rivals, the Sony RX100 and Canon S110. With a Leica-branded f/1.4 lens, a 1/1.7-inch image sensor, and the processing power to shoot 12 frames per second and 1080/60...
Good design, Great digital filters, Full manual control, Raw format shooting, Excellent screen
Not a touchscreen, Small sensor
With lots of fantastic features and brilliant image quality, Panasonic has produced a compact camera to be proud of with the LX7. With a wide maximum aperture of f/1.4, the ability to shoot in raw format and full manual controls, many people will surely ...
Polished and refined design, Excellent lens with ultra-fast aperture, Plenty of useful shooting features, Hotshoe accessory port can accomodate an EVF
Screen needs to be even better to match its rivals, No articulating/flip-out screen, Smaller sensor than rivals
Overall build quality of the Panasonic Lumix DMC-LX7 is very high. The camera shares the same predominantly metal finish as the LX5 and, in the hand, there's no mistaking it for anything but the premium camera that it is. The revised handgrip isn't partic...
Fast autofocus, f/1.4-2.3 wide aperture, great layout including physical aperture ring, small and light, sharp and detailed images, shoots raw and JPEG, neutral density (ND) filter is just a button away, can add electronic viewfinder (sold separately)
Smaller sensor than LX5, max aperture not sustained throughout zoom (so won't always match aperture ring), high ISO sensitivities not as good as larger-sensor competitors, images lack contrast straight from camera, touchscreen ability would be useful for
The LX7 might not have the biggest sensor out there, and so its higher ISO images won’t beat its competitors. But that’s not the be all and end all: this camera is a joy to use, we love the aperture ring and controls, fast autofocus and that enviable, ...
Noise at high sensitivities, Bit expensive, Focus seems to look daft sometime, Low battery life
One hell of camera, LX7 comes with the fastest aperture Leica lens and a compact 1/1.7” sensor. Further, the inclusion of Venus engines does allow LX7 to produce images with leasing colors and a good contrast. However, most of the Panasonic Lumix LX7 Revi...
Fastest lens in the category, Leica lens is exceptionally sharp for compact form factor with physical aperture dials, Excellent video bitrate along with stereo sound
Focusing can be a little daft at times, Archaic menu system that is a pain to browse through
The Panasonic Lumix DMC LX7 is a little known camera simply because it didn't ship out of the house of Canon or Nikon. What is little known about this camera is that it not only sports a Leica lens, but also the fastest lens in a point and shoot camera. W...
Very likely. The LX7 has placed itself squarely in the middle between the S100 and the RX100, in terms of both price and performance. The S100 is slightly cheaper (by 20 bucks) and way more pocketable, but photos arent quite as good. The RX100 is more ex...