Shooting upside down?





Pentax K1-ii and MZ6
Pentax Lenses 28-80 F, 300 DA*, 80-200 F, 35 F2.4 AL, M50 F1.7, 28-105 DFA, 20 F4 SMC
ONE UNITED Member
Can you stand on your head?





Hang on if we cross him with a bat problem solved lol


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Half Man... Half Pentax ... Half Cucumber
Pentax K-1 + K-5 and some other stuff
Algi

Although Algernon's might be the way to go.
I've done that befor at car shows
Regards, Philip
Checking my huge collection of stuff, I've found several small tripods, a Jessops 'Pod', magic arm, flexible arm, etc.
Just need to play a bit.
If you go the clamp on a leg route make sure your tripod is very stable or it could topple with the weight in the wrong place.

Regards
Tom
K-3iii's.
SMC PENTAX-DA FISH-EYE 1:3.5-4.5 10-17mm ED [IF], SMC PENTAX-DA* 1:2.8 16-50mm ED AL [IF] SDM,
SMC PENTAX-DA 1:4 15mm ED AL Limited, SMC PENTAX-DA 1:3.2 21mm AL Limited,
SMC PENTAX-F 1:2.8 28mm, SMC PENTAX-FA 1:2 35mm AL,
SMC PENTAX-FA 1:1.4 50mm, SMC PENTAX-DA 1:2.4 70mm Limited,
SMC PENTAX-D FA MACRO 1:2.8 100mm WR, SMC PENTAX-DA* 1:4 300mm ED [IF] SDM,
HD PENTAX-DA 1:5.6 560mm ED AW,
HD PENTAX -DA 1.4x AW AF REAR CONVERTER,
PENTAX AF160FC Auto Macro Ring Flash.
https://pentaxphotogallery.com/artist-gallery/?artist_id=20168301
Can't your tripod go low? Certainly with some you can just splay the legs out on the ground, but many will go quite low if you don't open all the sections and splay the legs as far as they will go.
If you go the clamp on a leg route make sure your tripod is very stable or it could topple with the weight in the wrong place.
Thanks Gwyn. The constraint is the centre column. Splaying the legs out gets the tripod lower, but the centre column needs to be left raised.
I have two tripods, both tall enough for me to use without the need for a long central column- I'm 5' 6". The one came with a long and a short column, and I use the short column just to hold the ballhead. It is tall enough that His Nibs can also use it without extending the column, and without bending - he is 6' 1". It came with a long and a short column as well.
I don't use a column at all on the travel tripod. It is tall enough for me not to need one. Both go down really low, but not flat.
CHEERS Vic.
Born again biker with lots of Pentax bits. Every day I wake up is a good day. I'm so old I don't even buy green bananas.
UNI-LOC tripod. Nuff said. Any position you want. Up a tree, down on the ground, in the water, Look at their adverts. It has been said many times they are like a demented octopus until you get used to them but then you wouldn't have anything else.
CHEERS Vic.
Uni-Loc is pretty much identical to Benbo in design. I have the Benbo which I got from a colleague. I only use it occasionally, it's very strong but can be a bit of a handful to set up! But it can do things no ordinary tripod could do.
Regards
Mike
JohnX
Plus Member
South London
The auto rotate facility in the camera takes care of the image, but not the controls layout.
I can use a ball-head to mount the camera at 90 degrees to the column, into portrait mode, but anyone know of a way to turn the camera body 180 degrees so it's low to the ground but correctly oriented in landscape mode?
I'm thinking a C shaped bracket of some sort that would offset the camera to one side of the centre column.
I could also use FluCard etc to 'remote view' the rotated image and enable some control over the body, but would prefer 'hands on',