Use a beanbag instead of a tripod, or a Joby Gorillapod - I use the small version of the latter item with my Leica V-Lux4, because it is within the weight restriction, -excellent at night, because the gorillapod can be wound around thin railings, and with the camera setting, on ten seconds delayed action mode , it's as solid as a rock - ideal for night shots. ( of course. For street photography, in which I now specialise, jacking-up the ISO to around 1600 is not so much a problem as it would be, with film., sharpness is guaranteed with the (fixed) DC Vario-Elmarit at f/2.8 throughout , -admittedly DIGITAL camera. If, however, I am using my RANGEFINDER IIIf FILM camera., then I rely on available street furniture to prop it ( too heavy for Joby 'pod) and on setting a hyperfocal distance on the lens barrel, before commencing the shoot and using that setting throughout. Granted, in wildly variable lighting conditions - such as , for instance, on a street with mixed neon signage, overhead tungsten or sodium lamps, strobes, floods, halogens, etc., this becomes, especially when shooting colour film, problematic, the only option then, is to carry a monopod. Manfrotto and Gitzo, both do sturdy, rubber-footed ones which can be extended to around one point eight metres, which should be adequate for anyone.. Actually, I prefer using a monopod to a beanbag, because one can always use it in, for instance, a restaurant or bar, on its shortest extension, fairly unobtrusively.. For preference I almost always shoot BW.
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