The War Against Blurry Photos: Holding Your DSLR Camera
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Your jewelry is weird
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@eliopoulos97 You're welcome, good shooting!
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@travelsignposts thanks for the info
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@eliopoulos97 Check out my video on holding the point and shoot camera if you've got a smaller model, but these DSLR tips also apply to the larger non-mirror cameras. And if you haven't got a mirror banging up and down, you also score in the longer exposure vibration stakes!
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What about the mirror-less? Lol
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nice video thank you for sharing this..
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Yes, you can go TOO light, and I also have a problem with very small video cameras. I'm used to heavier cameras, it goes with the job, but my wife Helen finds a lighter one - she likes her D40 - is easier to handle when you're shooting all day. But she still has problems with tilt with the compacts... :-/
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Very helpful video you made here. I always favored lighter, smaller cameras because I thought holding up their weight for a while was the thing that was making me unsteady. But it was my technique that was off because I held a camera with the weight of it distributed on both hands equally. In turn, I was more focused on keeping it steady when I pressed the shutter button. In turn, I got a lot blurry stuff and often some tilt.
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You remind me of Nigel Powers! heheheheheh
@MoshAndy nikon ftw.
bradlehwilleh 1 year ago 9
@Denso2131
My teeth are marginally better...
travelsignposts 10 months ago 2