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Shooting film inside churches (ROME)

Parliament Square.

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Parliament Square.

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Courtyard

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Courtyard

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Should I just leave the tripod at home then? Gosh...even outside you get shooed away??

Haven't been to Rome so don't know but maybe a monopod?

You could call it a walking stick. :wink:
 
Let me understand this better. you can be outside on public streets and STILL be told not to use a tripod??? That seems crazy.

It's not so crazy.
You have literally thousands of tourists crowding in narrow alleys.

Apart from the danger of tripping anyone, even if a very small percentage of tourists used tripods, the flow of people slows down considerably, as they try to walk around your tripod and not get into your shot.

I'm a photographer and sure as he'll I'd get mad if I saw a couple photogs taking up and blocking the sidewalk or a minute or so trying to get the perfect shot.
Most tourist hotspots in Europe are really congested, anything that slows down the traffic is a big no-no.
 
If you get permission from the property owner, a tripod should be OK (in a church, that would be God).
 
How long you been away from the US, Ratty? Law enforcement hassles photographers here all the time. The cops don't even know the laws. It's not worth getting into a pissing match with them.

I have lived in the city of Chicago since 1970, and have never had a problem with a Chicago Police Department officer about using a tripod on a public sidewalk. In fact, I have had pleasant conversations with officers about what I was doing, including an older officer who had trained on a Deardorff at the academy.
However, private security guards are always hassling me, even when on public ways. If I am on actual private property, I defer to them, but I have held my ground when on sidewalks. Of course, they don't know the laws of optics, and think that if I am 6 feet away from their building, that I am shooting it instead of the building across the street or across the river, at an appropriate camera-to-object distance.
 
It's not so crazy.
You have literally thousands of tourists crowding in narrow alleys.

Apart from the danger of tripping anyone, even if a very small percentage of tourists used tripods, the flow of people slows down considerably, as they try to walk around your tripod and not get into your shot.

I'm a photographer and sure as he'll I'd get mad if I saw a couple photogs taking up and blocking the sidewalk or a minute or so trying to get the perfect shot.
Most tourist hotspots in Europe are really congested, anything that slows down the traffic is a big no-no.

OK, that makes a lot of sense.
 
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