Archived posting to the Leica Users Group, 2001/02/13
[Author Prev] [Author Next] [Thread Prev] [Thread Next] [Author Index] [Topic Index] [Home] [Search]The idea behind parallax correction is that the subject is framed correctly but the background can be significantly different if you are focused close. What I do, if I feel it is critical, is to shift the camera slightly up and to the left so that the lens sits where the viewfinder was. Works fine for me. John Collier > From: Douglas Cooper <douglas@dysmedia.com> > > Pondering this question of a hotshoe-mounted viewfinder, I've just realized > -- I think -- that the hotshoe is in fact closer to the center of the lens, > horizontally, than is the rangefinder. The two windows to either side of > the lens on an M3 are evenly spaced from the center of the lens -- which I > suppose means that the focusing triangulation points to an apex in the very > center -- but surely the *framing* of the image is done solely through the > lefthand window, which is considerably to the left of what the lens sees. > Am I missing something here? In other words -- even with parallax > adjustment -- it would seem as if the image is always slightly off > horizontally (and that this is somewhat rectified by a hotshoe-mounted > finder). > > I probably am skipping over a crucial logical step, or it would seem that > the framing mechanism on the Leica is by necessity seriously inaccurate in > the horizontal plane, especially at close range. >