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Sagot :
Answer with explanation:
For both portrait and landscape, the one hand supporting the lens stays in the same position. However, the other hand holding the body of the camera and hovering over the shutter changes position. In landscape, the shutter hand grasps as if holding an umbrella, but while shooting portrait, the hand grips as if holding the top of a scroll (if shutter button is at highest point), or with the wrist cocked 90° like how waiters carry trays (if shutter is at lowest point.
Sometimes button pressing to switch from Manual Focus to Autofocus or DOF preview can more accessible depending on ergonomics of a particular camera and the shooting orientation.
It usually feels more awkward to shoot portrait-wise because the hands bend more in order to align the frame vertically; it depends on the camera used. For example, shooting landscape-wise is more comfortable with an SLR body due to the grip positions, where as the popularity for shooting portrait-wise on mobile phones is due to the default, more comfortable position of holding the phone vertically. As an analog example, a Rolleiflex camera by default is meant to be held vertically, and the medium format frame is meant for any type of photography, including landscape and portraiture. The comfort of shooting positions can depend on the camera and modifications used.
When I first hold the camera and starts positioning it for a portrait shot I rotated my camera by 90 degrees and it was straight in a portrait mode. I was holding my camera in the perfect position, left hand perfectly supporting and adjusting the lens and right hand holding the camera and right index finger on the shutter button.
When I put the camera down and picked it back again in the same position, my left hand was not exactly supporting the lens of the camera but one or two fingers were in front of the lens, I noticed that the angle was not even perfect it was slight near 85 degree angle and the camera portrait seemed unbalanced.
I felt awkward how when i picked up my camera again my fingers got in front of the lens.
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