Kodiak Qc
Suspended / Banned
- Messages
- 20,285
- Name
- French Canadian living in Europe since 1989!
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After a four hour shoot on the slopes of the vineyards,
my older son gave me his CF cards complaining non-
stop about the heat… like any Canadian would do!
"Another thing…" he said, "… at times I had the Sun
and sweat in the eyes, very unpleasant." He added. To
which my younger son said: " Of course, you're shooting
with the wrong eye! The older looked at me as to get my
very opinion on the matter and I explained them the domi-
nant eye preference.
Just to make sure, I, nevertheless, brought out the really
only bad points I observed when shooting with one or the
other eye:
Right eye shooters, like my older son, may look at the
subject with both eyes at the same time or, keeping an eye
in the VF, look around with the other. The disadvantage is
when shooting against daylight.
Left eye shooters, like Olivier (my younger son) and I,
are not blinded by the Sun since we are hiding behind the
camera. I was interesting though to see Olivier's reaction
when I admitted that the minus thing, when shooting with
the left eye, is that I often cause the focus point to run up
or down, left or right in the VF with my nose on the wheel!
"It happens to me too!" he said.
Question…
What other advantages or inconveniences did you experience
eyeballing left or right in the VF?
After a four hour shoot on the slopes of the vineyards,
my older son gave me his CF cards complaining non-
stop about the heat… like any Canadian would do!
"Another thing…" he said, "… at times I had the Sun
and sweat in the eyes, very unpleasant." He added. To
which my younger son said: " Of course, you're shooting
with the wrong eye! The older looked at me as to get my
very opinion on the matter and I explained them the domi-
nant eye preference.
Just to make sure, I, nevertheless, brought out the really
only bad points I observed when shooting with one or the
other eye:
Right eye shooters, like my older son, may look at the
subject with both eyes at the same time or, keeping an eye
in the VF, look around with the other. The disadvantage is
when shooting against daylight.
Left eye shooters, like Olivier (my younger son) and I,
are not blinded by the Sun since we are hiding behind the
camera. I was interesting though to see Olivier's reaction
when I admitted that the minus thing, when shooting with
the left eye, is that I often cause the focus point to run up
or down, left or right in the VF with my nose on the wheel!
"It happens to me too!" he said.
Question…
What other advantages or inconveniences did you experience
eyeballing left or right in the VF?
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