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Thread: Using Live View In Bright Sunlight

  1. #1
    rpcrowe's Avatar
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    Using Live View In Bright Sunlight

    The Canon 6D Mark-2 has some awesome focusing capabilities but, unfortunately some of the important capabilities, like face detect, are connected with using live view. The face detect does a great job in honing focus on the eyes, even shooting with an 85mm lens wide open at f/1.8 It is quick and very accurate; plus you don't have to move the focus point around nor focus and recompose. I am fond of anything that makes my shooting easier and more fun.

    I would have been a LOT EASIER and a LOT FASTER and MORE FUN to shoot this Mexican Dancer using face detect than it was moving the focus spot onto her face...

    Using Live View In Bright Sunlight

    Unfortunately, for my eyes at least, it is virtually impossible for me to view the image on the LCD using live view in the bright sun! This is especially true when shooting with the sun in back of me. Some folks might have better eyes than I but, I just cannot see the image on the LCD well enough to use it for viewing and focusing

    Enter the SWIVI Model Three viewfinder

    Using Live View In Bright Sunlight

    This viewfinder is composed of two parts: a plate that attaches to the tripod screw at the bottom of the camera and the viewfinder which slides into the plate and attaches securely to the camera. This is shown with the plate attached...

    Using Live View In Bright Sunlight

    The SWIVI is adjustable so that the viewfinder can be flush against the LCD, blocking out any stray light...

    Using Live View In Bright Sunlight

    The SWIVI includes a diopter for focusing on the LCD and a door which can shut the viewfinder for long exposures.

    Using Live View In Bright Sunlight

    The SWIVI can be tilted up to give you access to the LCD while still screening it from stray light which can be very handy when using a stylus to take advantage of the touch and shoot capability of the 6D2,

    Using Live View In Bright Sunlight

    While the addition of the SWIVI viewfinder makes the camera a bit bulky, the viewfinder really doesn't add much additional weight to the camera/lens set up. Any disadvantage is made up for (IMO) by the wonderfully clear view you get of the LCD. I have not seen such a large bright viewfinder view since I was using a Hasselblad camera with a straight down "stovepipe" accessory viewer
    Last edited by rpcrowe; 3rd August 2019 at 06:55 PM.

  2. #2

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    Re: Using Live View In Bright Sunlight

    Have one of the first that came out but gave up on it as on my then 6D the top part would just not sit tight against the camera thus allowing a shaft of light that was off putting so have they sorted that problem in the version 3? Thankyou. Russ.

  3. #3
    Moderator Manfred M's Avatar
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    Re: Using Live View In Bright Sunlight

    I guess I don't understand why using the autofocus and / or manual focus using the optical viewfinder isn't the most obvious way of shooting a DSLR. Single point focus on the eye and recompose is something that has worked for me for many years (decades really, back in the SLR days too).

  4. #4

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    Re: Using Live View In Bright Sunlight

    I suspect that bit of kit could be useful for video shooting when you have to use the rear viewing screen.

  5. #5

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    Re: Using Live View In Bright Sunlight

    Quote Originally Posted by Manfred M View Post
    I guess I don't understand why using the autofocus and / or manual focus using the optical viewfinder isn't the most obvious way of shooting a DSLR. Single point focus on the eye and recompose is something that has worked for me for many years (decades really, back in the SLR days too).
    Indeed, manual focusing via the Praktica MTL-3's OVF worked very well for me too, decades ago, because it had prisms and a split-circle thingy ... and my eye-sight at that time was almost reasonable.

    Decades later, such niceties have disappeared from my current DSLR, and macular edema has turned my manual focusing into a game of chance, plus Sigma's AF is quite well-known for it's random nature. I've plunked a 1.34X magnifier on the viewfinder which helps a bit, but it ain't perfect.

    By coincidence, I picked up my Panasonic DMC-GH1 today and re-discovered the joys (for me) of a good EVF, variable magnification focus-by-wire, plus all the important parameters visible right there, literally before the eye.

    My point is that, for some of us, the ease of "using the autofocus and / or manual focus using the optical viewfinder" isn't as obvious as it sounds.
    Last edited by xpatUSA; 5th August 2019 at 08:37 AM.

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