In addition to my full-size Bogen tripod I own on of these:
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Moderators: carlson1, Charles L. Cotton
Another thing that helped with the cave photos and some other shots I've done is learning to be creative with the tripod. In areas where there just wasn't enough room, I would leave it folded, but with the legs extended to full length, so it basically became an awkward monopod. Set the bottom against the trail edge and use a foot against it to hold it there, and a hip pinning it against the rail, and shots up to 10 seconds become possible with very little setup time.WildBill wrote:In addition to my full-size Bogen tripod I own on of these:
Pretty cool feature, but I'd be worried someone might see a bulge under my untucked shirt from that hanging off my belt.Divided Attention wrote:I have a monopod and it has proven to be a great asset! Lives in the car usually, and doesn't get in the way like a tripod can - especially at crowded events with a lot of parental paprazzi (or however you spell that) running around with eyes only for Jr. Also hangs from a belt loop with a small caribiner leaving hands free when needed like is often necessary at livestock events. JMPHO
If you do decide to go that route, I'd be interested in some of the old stuff. Particularly certain Minolta AF lenses and 120 gear. http://www.texasphotoforum.com" onclick="window.open(this.href);return false; and http://www/apug.org" onclick="window.open(this.href);return false; would also be good places to look for buyers.RPB wrote:I guess I could throw out/sell my old stuff and get back into photography, buy all new equipment and editing programs... but I haven't.