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              overhead_intro
              overhead_intro
              March 15, 2013
              Taylor Mathis

              Shooting Overhead? Save Your Back With A Tripod Arm

              From cookbooks in bookstore windows to magazine covers you pass in the grocery store check outline, it is hard not to notice the overhead camera view’s popularity in food photography. If you are going to shoot your food overhead, there is one piece of equipment that will make your job a lot easier: The Tripod Arm.

              The overhead camera angle (aka Bird’s Eye View) is the go-to camera position when you have multiple dishes that all need to be in focus  in the same shot. Imagine you are shooting for a magazine or a chef’s cookbook and they want to do a story about chips and salsa.

              single salsa Shooting Overhead? Save Your Back With A Tripod Arm

              This would be a great shot if  you were doing a recipe or story for only one salsa, but for this story, your client wants three recipes pictured. Clients wanting multiple recipes in one shot are not uncommon. With cookbooks, there are almost always more recipes in the book than images of those recipes, so combining three recipes in one image is something that publishers like to see. To fit three recipes in one shot, an overhead angle like this is more effective.


              salsa shot large Shooting Overhead? Save Your Back With A Tripod Arm

              In the above image, you can clearly see the three recipes. If your client is a magazine, a horizontal version of an overhead shot like this would work well for a two page spread. When shooting overhead shots with multiple subjects, there is great deal of moving the subjects around and styling the “hero” versions of the subject. Here are a few behind the scene shots of what went into arriving at the final 3 salsa shot.


              salsa behind thescenes Shooting Overhead? Save Your Back With A Tripod Arm

              To shoot from the overhead camera angle, your camera will need to be directly above your set and pointed straight down. If you are hand holding, you will end up in a position like this.


              lowerback pain Shooting Overhead? Save Your Back With A Tripod Arm

              This is not a good habit to get into. If you are in a pinch and need to grab a quick overhead shot then you can, but for extended periods of time, shooting in this position will lead to lower back pain and increase the possibility of pulling a muscle and being sidelined for an extended period of time. For a freelance photographer, that can be a costly injury. It is hard to pay the bills when you are sidelined on the couch with a back injury.

              Don’t fear, the The Tripod Arm is here to save your back. This metal bar screws to the top of your tripod. On one end you attach your tripod head and extend the bar over the set. Position your camera so it is looking down onto your set. In this image, I am using the Manfrotto 131D Side Arm.


              arm shot Shooting Overhead? Save Your Back With A Tripod Arm

              With your camera attached to the arm, your camera will stay in one position keeping the same view of your set. This allows you to not only save you back, but adjust subjects on the set and keep that same camera position. When hand holding and leaning over, you will not always have that same camera position every time.

              When shooting with a tripod arm, make sure that you are using a stable tripod that can handle the weight of the camera, bar, and tripod head. If you have a heavy lens, camera, and tripod head you may need to add a counter weight on the other end of the bar. Make sure your camera is securely in place and won’t tip over before you start working.

              To see what your images look like, shooting with a bar will require you to shoot tethered. I like using a remote when shooting so I don’t have to be by the computer the whole time.

              If you are having back pain or plan on shooting overhead images, give a tripod arm a try.

              Want to learn more about food photography and see more form this shoot? Check out photographingFOOD.com

               

              Food
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              • http://tambnguyen.com/ Tam Nguyen Photography

                Great post. More proof that you don’t need expensive gear to have amazing results.

              • http://www.vinsonimages.com yamaha83

                you only get lower back pain when you don’t know how to move. No matter what you do, you should always have a stable mid line… and a rounded back is never good.

              • http://www.facebook.com/people/Günter-Matthias-Wallmoden-Gimborn/100000994976326 Günter Matthias Wallmoden-Gimb

                and that’s why I got this puppy http://www.vanguardworld.com/index.php/en/pv/products/photo-video/detail-1-4-15-439.html

                it already has that feature built :)
                less parts to buy, less disassemble/reassemble to do.

              • http://twitter.com/fauxtauxgrafix Matthew Guss

                Good advice

              • Edward Frazier

                Some Tripods have feature built in…although I have met a few that didn’t know their tripods did this. I currently use the Manfrotto 190XPROB that supports this feature.

              • Kenneth Prater

                I have the 190xPROB and I love it. I get to pull off great stuff like that and it even works well as low clearance tripod with the 90 degree angle. Awesome product from Manfrotto.

              • http://www.facebook.com/profile.php?id=1632496930 Tommy McPharlin

                My Canon 60D with the articulating screen in conjunction with the Manfrotto 190XPROB makes a nice combination for overhead shots. I like to pack light, and leave the laptop at home when I go to a restaurant..

              • http://www.facebook.com/ben.kwok.31 Ben Kwok

                I have the Carbon fibre 190CXPRO3, coupled with a joy stick head, which has the same feature, totally brilliant for travel to since it’s so lightweight.

              • http://www.facebook.com/nicholas.gonzalez3 Nicholas Gonzalez

                I hope he ate that afterwards. It looked good.

              • http://www.facebook.com/krzemienpict Kornel Krzemień

                the manfrotto 055xprob has that feature as well
                http://fotoburschen.de/wp-content/gallery/manfrotto_055_xprob/manfrotto_055xprob-5.jpg

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