Helen B said:Pete,
Is the water too deep to stand a big tripod, or some other type of camera stand, in? Do a little piling operation or make a small-scale jack-up rig? Depends on how serious you are. Add jacks, or equivalent, to the pontoon? You don't need to lift the pontoon out of the water like a full-on jack-up rig, just stabilise the pontoon to the bed. If you drop a punt or scaffold pole into the bed does it stick firmly? How easy would it be to lash or clamp two, three or four poles to the gunwhale or a cross-pole?
Best,
Helen
df cardwell said:Yep.. classic use of legs: groovy
or, a gyro stailizer
but when you resort to electric, you're halfway to digital....
colrehogan said:How much is the water moving? I mean, it would seem that if the water is still, then you should be able to shoot just fine.
Ole said:There was one ship's photographer who added several pounds of lead to his camera to make it heavier for hand-held shooting...
What about oblique?dancqu said:Are you problems transverse or longitudinal or both? Dan
glbeas said:What I read of Clyde Butcher, he would set the tripod up on the site he wanted to shoot, weighted down, and leave it for several days so it would settle to a stable point. Must have been a bear pulling it back out of the muck after shooting.
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