GeneW
Veteran
Nice tip, Roman! A poor man's Paramender 🙂Roman said:OK, let's share it with the TLR newbies (old guns like myself of course already know this one):
Measure the distance between the centers of the lenses on your TLR; take a film canister, and make a markt at this same distance down from the rim; cut off the bottom at that mark; slice the resulting tube lengthwise.
Now, if you want to take a picture with your TLR and a tripod, and parallax might be a problem (e.g. with close-up objects), do the following: put the TLR on the tripod, with the center column all the way lowered (as it always should be - the center column of any tripod is only there for extreme emergency cases, as using it extended turns the tripod basically into a very unstable monopod on three feet), and compose your shot; now loosen the center column, raise it slightly up, and slide that film canister onto the column, lower it again until the film canister sits snuggly between the camera and that part, where the tripod's feet are mounted; tighten center column - voilà, the TLR's taking lens is now exactly at the same height as the viewing lens was when composing the pic... (and I guess the 2 or 3 cm of center column extension won't jeopardize the tripod's stability with a lightweight TLR).
Roman
Gene