Although its black levels and motion clarity are its most outstanding picture elements, the 19D1E also has a few other tricks up its sleeve. Its colours, for instance, are terrific, combining surprisingly rich saturations with some of the most natural toning you'll probably ever see on such a small screen.

OK, yes, one or two rich reds can look a touch orangey, and the occasional standard def skin tone can go a touch waxy. But this is all very small beer indeed versus the various more extreme problems usually found in at least one or two areas on most small TVs.
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Remarkably, given its size, the 19D1E's pictures are also detailed enough to clearly delineate the difference between an HD source and a standard definition source. For instance, comparing the DVD of Casino Royale with the Blu-ray, you can definitely see more detail in Daniel Craig's craggy face and fancy clothes when watching the Blu-ray. What's more, the 19in screen does a superbly noise-free job of both upscaling the DVD to its HD Ready pixel count and downscaling the 1,920 x 1,080 Blu-ray.

Really the only fly in the 19D1E's picture ointment is - predictably - its brightness. Images don't blaze off the screen quite as aggressively as those of some rivals, which could represent a problem if you're using the screen in a very bright environment, such as a conservatory. But in a relatively low-lit bedroom or study the TV's superlative contrast and colours will really make a mark.

Even the 19D1E's sound is pretty good, for heaven's sake. Traditionally, small LCD TVs sound like the audio equivalent of two tin cans and a piece of string. But the 19D1E delivers enough raw volume to fill a room a good 25m square, together with enough clarity to deliver even a film action scene without too much compression, flatness and distortion. There's even a more than half-baked attempt to produce a bit of bass, for heaven's sake!

Verdict

Although the relentless shift towards ever-bigger screen sizes might make Sharp's 19D1E appear a little unfashionable, if you are in the market for such a diminutive TV, it's comfortably the finest LCD ‘portable' I've seen so far.