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Recommended Travel Friendly Macro Tripod

Started 5 months ago | Questions thread
maggiemole Senior Member • Posts: 1,987
Re: Shooting upside down? Use an "L" bracket.

..Bobby2Shots wrote:

EarthMurmurs wrote:

I am an avid fungi photographer. My goal is to take shots as close to ground level as possible, to show a perspective unseen by humans who tower over these small, fascinating organisms.

To achieve this, I have a tripod with the centre column inverted, which allows my camera to be at ground level, and very stable to set up 10-20 shots on manual focus, which are then stacked when I get home.

This does mean operating the camera upside down, which takes some learning. Fortunately my camera has tilting display, so I do my focusing and metering from the screen.

Hello EarthMurmurs,

There's no need to shoot upside-down if you have an L-bracket for your camera. Using the same set-up you're using now,,, with the column inverted,,, just drop the ballhead's top-plate into its' 90* portrait-notch, then attach the side of your L-bracket to the ballheads' quick-release.

Bobby, could you post a photo of this set-up, please? I’m having a hard time (actually total failure) visualising it. I’ve never used an L-bracket which might be the reason. Let alone a balhead with bracket attached, I always see them attached to the camera. I really don't like shooting upside-down, and have been playing with the mirror solution proposed by Beatsy. This works for small flowers (thank you, Beatsy!) but I think the L-bracket might offer more compositions for larger mushroom groups.

Many thanks.

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