The Nikon D750 Hack That Will Change Your Life for the Better

The Nikon D750 Hack That Will Change Your Life for the Better

For the last 10 days, I have been on easy street. Floating on a cloud. My photography life expertly hacked. Thanks to a Facebook video, my single biggest frustration with my Nikon D750s has been alleviated.

Because of the heroic actions of a savvy member of the MagMod community Facebook group, my D750 eyecup hasn’t found its way to the bottom of my bag or vanished in the streets, trails, and unbeaten paths that my job would often have me travel. Arizona-base photographer Jason Marino, also perturbed with constantly replacing D750 eyecups, discovered the solution to keeping those little suckers in place.


“When we switched over to Nikon last year we immediately fell in love with the D750 bodies,” Marino told Fstoppers. “Light, versatile, with an amazing sensor and great low light capability, we couldn't have asked for anything more... Until we started losing eye cups at an alarming rate. For the past year I've tried everything to keep them on the camera, and ultimately settled on gaffers tape wrapped sloppily around the cup and mount area.”

It was this constant fumbling with gaffers tape that we’ve all done so many times that led Marino to a streamlined solution. Marino took advantage of the D750’s tilting screen by wrapping a thin piece of tape around the lower, unpadded edge of the eyecup several times and attaching the remaining lead to the flat space behind the retracted screen.

A think strip of gaffer taper will easily wrap three or four times around the bottom of you replacement eyecup.



I recently sat down on my sofa, camera in hand, and studied the parts. After about two minutes an idea struck me, and here we are, as perfect as possible. The tape holds the eye cup in place perfectly and I've not lost one since. Now if only Nikon would do something so we don't have to rig them up!

Marino quickly shared a video of the hack in action in a Facebook group shared by MagMod users. This prompted me to abandon my cup-less cameras and tape on two new eyecups. I’m happy to announce, that after nearly two weeks, I’ve yet to lose an eyecup. This a feat that I’d never thought would possible. The hair-pulling frustration of never having an eyecup seems to be over for now!

Leaving a small lead to stick behind the D750 LCD will act as an anchor for your eyecup.



A gaffer tape hack might still be a sore replacement for parts that actually stay in place, but my workhorse D750s certainly needed the TLC.

Do any of you have a camera hack that has made your day? Let us know below.

Check out Jason Marino's work here.

Adam Sparkes's picture

Adam is the Assistant Director of Photography at Central Michigan University. He has been pushing a button for a living since 2009 and for that entire time constantly finds himself correcting people who pronounce it "fur-tographer".

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34 Comments

lol,just use double sided sticky tape,put it on the backside of the eyepiece,mount it on the camera and firmly press..it isnt visible at all and holds the rubber eyepiece like a mofo!! i'd could show you a picture of the camera but ya'll wont see any difference :)))

Yes indeed, double stick is the way to go. I use it on all my eyecups.

Trying this TODAY! Ugh. I love Nikon's bodies. But this was just ridiculous. Glad to finally have a somewhat okay solution.

Yeah, it isn't elegant, but it works!

I have this same problem and what I don't understand is why Nikon has changed the design at all from previous models. I've had D200s, D300s and D300s, D7200, D700, yada yada and none of them had this problem at all. The only camera to have this eye piece problem is the D750.

Mind blowing, right?!

D7000, D7100, D6x0 all have the same problem with the eyecup. A little tab of gaff tape between the bottom of the hotshoe and the top of the eyepiece underneath of the rubber eye cup adds enough friction and shim so that it fits tight and stays put.

Oh that viewfinder issue. The best solution I've end up with is to get this korean made viewfinder magnifier, KPS 1.3 Viewfinder, it's actually amazing.
Though the it is really hard to find back then, I can't imagine how rare it is today.

That looks interesting, but is apparently no longer available. All the other magnifiers I've seen are ungainly oversized and vignette like hell.

Aha! I have this problem with my Sony a6000. Thanks, I think this solution will work there, too!

After losing my first couple of eye-pieces I added a small blob of Blu-Tack to the rim of the body and slid my new eye-piece back in snugly and haven't lost one since, and it's not visible.

Like the poster stuff?

The very same, I used it as a temp fix but 3 months later and still using the same eyepiece.

Good idea. I just ordered some Loctite Fun-Tak for the D750 eyepiece.

Little drop of superglue works wonders.

I lost my eye cap so a bought a better eye cap from hoodman that fits on very tight. No need for tape.

ahaha, I feel now less stupid to lose mine the day I bought my D750 :D but honnestly I think this eyepiece is totally useless. I didn't replace it, and it changes nothing to me

Life changing? Hmmm click baiting at its best! Was hoping for something more interesting..

Just glue it with a tiny dab of super glue - you can break it apart later if need be but you won't need to.

Now if only I could find an eye cup replacement that has a blinder built in like the D810.

There is this magical stuff called Sugru (Irish word for 'Play'–https://sugru.com/) which is essentially mouldable glue that works wonders. You mould it in to place like PlayDoh and it bonds to the rubber eyecup and camera body and hardens. And, its available in black so it doesn't look stupid...like the blu tack I used to use looked...my eyebrows have only just grown back!!

I dunno, I lost the eyepiece to my D600 some time back. Don't miss it.

Actually, I had this exact same problem with mine. I've found the best fix is to purchase the older replacement (the DkK-21 I believe, its the ones without the three little ridges on either side and is much thinner in profile.) It fits a lot more snug and I've yet to lose one.

I lost my camera's eye cup a couple years ago. I really haven't missed it. I also shoot with a random assortment of d200s (they're almost phased out but every now and then we still get one), d300s and d7000s for a sports photography company I shoot for and honestly most of their cameras don't have eye cups. I feel like it makes my camera look more pro. You know battle scars and all. I feel like eye cups are somewhat like that little plastic thingy that covers your screen when you buy a new camera, you lose them almost immediately and then wonder why you needed them in the first place.

Here is my solution. Wrapped gaffer's tape around the viewfinder then put the eyepiece back on. It has been rock solid ever since. No signs of the tape.

I have yet to lose (or have one fall off) any eyecup from any camera I've owned (including 3-D750's) so I feel it's a photographer issue moreso and not a camera issue.

Dustin is clearly a filth liar with trust issues! What are you shooting in live view exclusively?!

HeHe, just realised Eyecup has vanished.....

Do you have a fix for the top dial on the d750? Mine keeps spinning automatically without locking. It switched from M to effects or whatever and is not 'lockable'

Or you could get the Hoodman HoodEYE. I love mine!

https://hoodmanusa.com/cgi/commerce.cgi?preadd=action&key=H-EYEN22S

That was my solution too. The only issue is that I really like the tilting display and it's a problem that the eye cup makes it hard to easily fold the display in and out. I love the Hoodman, but I think I'm going back to the old shallow eye cup.

I adopted this solution, is much more steady and never came off. on top of that, you can decide to swap to the large rubber eyepiece which is more comfortable if you wear glasses.

http://www.ebay.es/itm/Genuine-Nikon-Round-Rubber-Eyecup-for-D7100-D5200...

If you're loosing the eyecup on the D750 then you are being too rough with it... I've had mine for years and it's never once come off... What are you guys doing with your cameras? Letting them bounce and rub all over the place?... That's not the way these electronic marvels are meant to be handled! ... It's your own damn fault!... Get a point and shoot if that's the way you insist on treating your equipment. These cameras are made for adults who have an appreciation for the finer things in life, not for flat-footed neanderthals who wouldn't know the meaning of respect if it hit them in the face.

I have a no bubble wrap mentality to my gear, but I'm very sure handed and I've never lost a eyecup before. I had my d750 for a year but then suddenly lost two of them in one month. It's just too loose. Initially it's on there pretty tight, but if it gets removed once or loosens, it starts coming off all the time. This is especially true if you do street shooting or events where you might have to unbag or switch cameras, compose, and shoot in one motion. Not everyone has the luxury of babying their gear. Things like eye cups shouldn't be falling off.