![]() ![]() A picture is just visual and all the rest is left up to the imagination of the viewer. The camera's digital level helps get the shot.Naturally, being in the midst of a landscape filled with sounds, smells, and air movements, quite differs from merely looking at an image of it. Especially on a since of a hill or on uneven ground. There is no way to correctly eyeball a landscape and nail it level all the time. There's possibly one or two others who may have this problem and could be interested in how I happen to manage my case.ĭoes your camera have a digital level on the EVF or live view? if it shows level and your pics are not, than you should be able to calibrate the camera's level. So that's my story with Meniere’s, vertigo attacks are basically really under control now because of the salt avoidance, but still have hearing loss and tinnitus.Īpologies to all for posting this instead of a direct PM. There is no need to add salt to any food, I find that it tastes better without salt anyway. But the weird thing was that it always took 4 days from ingestion to attack, so it was never clear what caused it, until proven on one occasion when a particularly salty restaurant meal did the delayed 4 day attack thing.Īlso hard physical work for a few days can bring on the wobblies as I guess the extra sweating drains salt out of the system, so it seems to be rapid or big changes in sodium that triggers attacks.īasically I avoid salt and MSG altogether and it does no harm as blood tests always show mid normal range sodium in my system. It was say a bag of salted crisps or some meal with too much MSG in it that would trigger an attack. Seemed to be triggered when some idiot doctor put me on statins to "control cholesterol" (every two weeks, regular as clockwork, a severe vertigo attack), went away for a few years when I stopped the statins but slowly crept back again.Įventually realised that it was salt intake, or in fact sodium being the problem, but I have never added salt deliberately to anything for the last 50 years or more anyway. Seems to be no hard and fast rules about what constitutes Meniere’s so diagnoses always seem to be guesses.įor me tinnitus 24/7 in right ear, about 90% hearing loss in right ear, occasional vertigo attacks that in the extreme lead to vomiting (same as sea-sickness). I have tinnitus 24/7, and actually think I have Meniere’s although undiagnosed by a physician. Now I use mirrorless cameras and depend on the internal level. Unless I really concentrated and lined up the horizon with a viewfinder gridline, the images would always be slanted by close to the same amount. I was the same when I used DSLRs with optical viewfinders. My latest camera has a horizon display which helps when I remember to us it but otherwise I just straighten in post and don't worry too much about it. I am similar, I often lean down on the right. have you ever tested to make sure the sensor in your camera is square? It's just the rest of us that aren't! LOL.īut joking aside. ![]() ![]() What is going on here? Is this a practice makes perfect type of thing, because if so, it hasn't been working for me.Īnd yes I know that obviously if you use any kind of level then the picture would be level, that point is of course moot. I'm not talking subtly by like 1 degree, but perceptibly off by maybe 2 degrees (maybe even 3). So, when I am taking the shot, I perceive myself as taking a level shot but in reality it is nowhere near level. The thing is, I do not notice this at all when I am taking the photo, and barely in camera after that unless I am really looking. I am beginning to wonder if my internal gyro stabilizers are malfunctioning, but I am finding that exactly 100% of the time, my horizon lines are tilted (usually down towards the right) when I take photos, whether portraits or landscapes. ![]()
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