
Smallest body with Image Stabilization | Free-Angle Live View | Various art functions | Versatile Functions
The E-620 comes with six Art Filter functions that you can apply to your pictures. Before you take the picture, you can preview the filter effect right on the LCD in Live View mode. Aperture and shutter speed can also be set to achieve exactly the shot you want. Thanks to this high-speed creative filtering process, you'll be able to enjoy fun, hassle-free creative photography.
This effect enhances colours, making them stronger and more vivid, creating high-impact pictures with a pop art feeling.
The soft tone creates an ethereal, otherworldly atmosphere for beautiful images with a fantasy-like feel.
Utilizes muted colour tonalities to create a gentle light. The subject floats serenely in its own world, like a misty memory or the landscape of a dream.
Subdues highlights and shadows to reflect the ambience of a perfectly illuminated scene. Both the shade and highlight areas are rendered softly to provide a sophisticated feel.
This effect recreates the rich, grainy look and tonality evoked by monochrome pictures, giving images a dramatic feel.
This unique colour tone reproduces the peripheral vignetting and unique colour tone of photos taken with a toy camera.
The TruePic III image processing engine is the powerhouse that enables the 12.3-megapixel Live MOS Sensor and high-resolution lenses to manifest their full performance. This image processing engine is now complemented by the new Art function, combining to create the TruePic III+ image processing engine for enhanced image quality and enhanced creativity that takes you beyond the limitations of conventional photography.
The E-620 provides five aspect ratios including the standard 4:3, as well as 16:9 for impressive, cinematic-style images, and 6:6, which is available with medium-format cameras. With Live View, you can select the aspect ratio before shooting and check it on the LCD monitor during shooting.
Multiple exposure is possible with both Live View shooting and viewfinder shooting. In Live View shooting, previously shot data*2 is used as the base for a multiple exposure, and the final image can be modified right on the LCD by overlaying a new image.