I used my right eye for more than twenty years. When it became too farsighted, 
I switched to my left, but I had trouble closing my right eye while keeping the 
left open. Sometimes I blocked my right eye with my right hand. At other times, 
I wore an eye patch. When I bought my *istD, I found that it had enought 
diopter correction to allow me to use my right eye again. So I'm back to being 
a righty shooter, which feels, well, right.
Paul


> Left. I'm near sighted differently on each eye, and back when I didn't
> use contacts (or glasses) my left eye was my "good one". Now, with
> contact lenses on both eyes, I suppose I could go to the right, but it
> doesn't feel, well, right.
> 
> j
> 
> On 9/27/05, Lucas Rijnders <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> > On Tue, 27 Sep 2005 07:41:29 +0200, Jens Bladt <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
> > wrote:
> >
> > > I'd like to know how many of you is holding the camera/lens correctly -
> > > in
> > > the palm of your left hand. Like this:
> > > http://www.camerahobby.com/EBook-HoldingCamera_Chapter5Sub.htm
> >
> > Whew, passed that test. Must be because it's in the manual :o)
> >
> > On a related subject: I use my left eye when photographing, like miss
> > Nikon from Jens's link does. Someone once told me to use my right eye,
> > because that would make it easier to see the world outside the viewfinder.
> > I tried, but it's hard to break habits... Anyone care to comment? What eye
> > do you use, and is one better than the other?
> >
> > --
> > Regards, Lucas
> >
> >
> 
> 
> --
> Juan Buhler
> http://www.jbuhler.com
> photoblog at http://photoblog.jbuhler.com
> 

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