Archived posting to the Leica Users Group, 2010/03/17
[Author Prev] [Author Next] [Thread Prev] [Thread Next] [Author Index] [Topic Index] [Home] [Search]Leo's question is serious. Our university has a handicapped student's studio featuring big screen displays with text the size of newspaper headlines, text to voice translators, one handed keyboards (left or right, take your choice), standing desks, speed changing recorders for slowing down speech, clocks with braille faces, etc. A one handed camera seems a natural. Apart from the Kine Exacta which several Luggers have mentioned, several other cameras facilitate left handed operation. The Rollei 35 can be held upside down and operated with the left hand. That's the way you have to hold it to use a flash. Most P&S digital cameras can be used upside down and operated with the left hand. Since the majority of P&S digitals use an LCD screen instead of an optical viewfinder and have auto focus and auto exposure all you have to do is make sure you can press the shutter release with the left hand. My wife's Canon SD1200IS can be used exactly that way. When I was taking 8mm movies, I had a Bolex pistol grip that held the camera and took pictures when I squeezed the trigger. It didn't matter which hand I held it in. Larry Z