Lowering your height

Yoricko

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Mar 24, 2009
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Just curious,

I'm sure a lot of good street shooters has their own way of lowering their height to reduce wide-angle distortion off-axis.

I've seen some (from videos) just hunching their back, some just bend their knees, some with some-sort of fighting stance, and etc.

How do you normally lower your height?
 
I almost have to go down on one knee but if i can shoot from a park bench or sitting on something else like a stone wall that's even better.
Not always great being tall :)
 
i carry a chair with me...


Because you never seem to use emoticons I have to take this seriously.

I'm a little worried though at the thought of street shooters all around the world now heeding your advice and carrying chairs with them!
 
Toulouse-Lautrec would have been a natural of the low perspective at five foot one!
 
hmmm... interesting... i don't think i've ever as much as lowered my chin. you know, kinda like, if the picture is there, it's there, distortion or not... oh well, i'm probably just rationalizing my innate laziness

:cool:
 
I never really gave it much thought. I squat, take a knee, lay prone--whatever puts the camera where it needs to be. Don't over think it.
 
1. Yashica T3, T4 with scope/waist-level finder...
2. Flip-Bac for digicams:
Flipbac-Angle-Viewfinder-Digital-Cameras.jpg

3. DSLR with articulated LCD screens...
 
Instead of the bellybutton angle, why not use a monopod and shoot from the air?

There are no rules as how you shoot, but make sure you have a good rational reason why you're using a certain angle. For me using eye-level angle is more realistic since the viewer could have seen the photographed scene from the same viewpoint.
 
Instead of the bellybutton angle, why not use a monopod and shoot from the air?

There are no rules as how you shoot, but make sure you have a good rational reason why you're using a certain angle. For me using eye-level angle is more realistic since the viewer could have seen the photographed scene from the same viewpoint.

That would make more sense it's usually height I lack, I often hold wide-angles overhead to try straighten the verticals ... like this

 
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