If you bring your camera with you in your travels - whether it’s an overseas vacation or a day trip to a local park - it’s likely that you’ll be without your tripod for at least some of the time. Sometimes it’s not feasible to carry a tripod, especially in a place where it’s simply not permitted to do so (museums, churches, etc.). Or maybe you’ll opt to leave the tripod at home and lighten your load. Street photographers work almost exclusively without tripods, as do many photojournalists and some portrait photographers. Even if you’re a landscape photographer with unshakeable allegiance to the three-legged stabilizer, hand-held shooting is an important skill to learn for those unplanned moments when a tripod isn’t set up or available.
FORM
The two most important technical considerations in hand-held photography are form and camera settings. In general, you’ll want to hold the camera with two hands and keep your elbows tucked in. The idea is to keep the camera stabilized with your body, effectively weighing it down. You’ve probably seen photographers hold the camera in one extended hand, using the display screen to focus, as they rattle off a bunch of shots. This is about looking cool while taking pictures but does nothing to improve the photo, and for most people will lead to poor results. If you are a portrait photographer using flash and fast shutter speed you could use this technique to look slick, and possibly to put your subjects at ease with a more easy-going posture, but for environmental shots using natural light I’d recommend going old-school: use two hands, look through the view finder, and hold a tight (but relaxed), stable stance. You won’t look as cool taking the photo, but you’ll get the better shot.
HAND-HELD RULE
You might know the rule of thumb to use a minimum shutter speed of 1 over the focal length. For example, if you’re shooting with a 50mm lens (on a full frame camera such as a Canon 5DSR), a shutter speed of 1/50 is the slowest recommended speed for a reasonably sharp photograph. (If you’re using a crop frame camera you need to first factor in how the crop factor affects focal length. For example a Canon 7D Mark II or a Canon Rebel T7i both have a crop factor of 1.6 which effectively magnifies the image by that amount. So a 50mm lens becomes 80mm - i.e. 50 x 1.6 = 80. In this case the minimum shutter speed is 1/80. Ok, no more math, I promise!) Let’s look at an example and see how this works in practice. We’ll assume that we do not want any creative blur and would like the photo sharp throughout.
Our location is the former mining town of Shifen, Taiwan. A slow moving train passes right through the center of the village, as it has for nearly 100 years, but these days it is carrying tourists, not coal. We’re using a Canon EF 24-70mm lens, which is my primary workhorse lens for travel photography. We’ll use a focal length of 70mm for an image of the train passing through the colorful main street - it’s safest to keep some distance from the tracks and zoom in. Notably, this lens does not have built-in image stabilization, so it’s a good test of the hand-held rule. Based on the focal length of 70mm, our shutter speed is 1/80 (the nearest increment to 1/70), and it produces a decent image. If we zoom in however, many parts of the image are soft, and the moving train is outright blurry. No amount of post-process sharpening will make this image usable in any reasonably large size. The best we can do is process this image for low resolution use, such as Instagram (or a photography blog!)