VinceC
Veteran
This mainly affects those with R3a's, Canon P's, M3's, Nikon RF's and other bodies with close to 1:1 viewfinders.
I've run across several unrelated threads in which folks who are left-eyed say they can't take advantage of the ability to shoot with both eyes open, as they'd just be staring at the back of the camera. As a Nikon RF user, I've always been a both-eyes shooter but am right-eyed.
Anyway, it occurs to me that a leftie shooters ought not feel left out. The whole idea of using this technique is to have the viewfinder frame floating there while you examine the scene with both eyes wide open. So there's no real reason you couldn't keep your dominant left eye open while bringing the camera viewfinder up to your nondominant right eye for framing.
On the other hand, the drawback is that it does require unlearning a lifetime of camera usage, so it's not necessarily a practical suggestion. Still, I thought I'd toss around the idea.
I've run across several unrelated threads in which folks who are left-eyed say they can't take advantage of the ability to shoot with both eyes open, as they'd just be staring at the back of the camera. As a Nikon RF user, I've always been a both-eyes shooter but am right-eyed.
Anyway, it occurs to me that a leftie shooters ought not feel left out. The whole idea of using this technique is to have the viewfinder frame floating there while you examine the scene with both eyes wide open. So there's no real reason you couldn't keep your dominant left eye open while bringing the camera viewfinder up to your nondominant right eye for framing.
On the other hand, the drawback is that it does require unlearning a lifetime of camera usage, so it's not necessarily a practical suggestion. Still, I thought I'd toss around the idea.