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Wow, I can't imagine a more hostile/uncomfortable environment for a museum collection than an 86' steel boxcar in summer heat. Got AC and lots of it?I'll never forget being in Mt. Shasta, CA and finding a yard of 'preserved' equipment including a PFE wood reefer. It was really hot, and climbing inside that reefer was downright comfortable and cool.For years NYS&W in Cooperstown had their minicomputer inside an insulated boxcar beside the Cooperstown station. Worked well, but just sayin', INSULATION.....
@bbussey and @davefoxx,I've got a horizontal arm for my tripod with a phone swivel clip on the end.I'll play around and see if I can get it closer to ground level, but it's a little tight in that area.Maybe if I turn the phone vertical and upside down I can get a little closer?Plus my phone can zoom out to .5
The goal is to get the camera lens on the phone as close to the ground as possible. Upside-down portrait orientation will do that. One of the landscape orientations will as well, based on which corner of the phone where your camera lens is. My iPhone lens in either configuration ends up being a scale 5½ feet above the ground. I can get within 5 feet if I take the phone out of its protective battery case, but 5½ feet yields some dramatic perspectives.
Very nice.Another trick I employ is placing the camera in locations or from angles that aren't viewable under normal circumstances. This shot that I took for the McGrattan memorial video was from the perspective of under an overpass looking out into the train room. The room walls are painted pale blue, and I had to make sure the far side of the room was clear of all clutter so that it appeared to be a cloudless sky. The phone is resting on the track, up against the stone wall to get the camera lens between the two converging tracks. This was bracketed manually and came out relatively well. A 800w halogen lamp simulating the sun is out of frame to the upper right, providing illumination. Another is aimed at the far walls.
I highly recommend grabbing a sheet of cheap foamcore and hitting it with your favorite sky color for just such situations. I remember using that very trick, combined with a bar stool to hold it, when Max was over and we were shooting these:https://conrail1285.com/october-2007-max-magliaro-visit/Damn, I wish I had used two on that shot though.That's picture Lee posted on another site in 2008 and I caught RW fever.