Ulanzi WLF – A Waist‑Level Experiment With a Broken Nikon D80

By Max Tiraquon

I should start of by saying I ran my first draft through some AI to make it a little more readable, I just scrapped through my English exams in school. Anyway originally it was titled Shooting From the Hip With a Broken Piece of Sh*t the new titles definitely more SEO friendly

This whole thing came about from a mishmash of ideas and accidents. TL;DR: I ended up really enjoying the process and came away with a couple of nice photos.

How It Started

Last year I watched a YouTube video by Snappiness where he 3D‑printed a waist‑level viewfinder using cheap Amazon lenses. I loved the idea, but without access to a 3D printer, it went straight onto the “maybe one day” pile.

Then Ulanzi the Chinese camera accessory brand announced their own version: a metal waist‑level finder with a 28mm viewing angle and frame lines for 35mm and 50mm. All for $50, taxes and shipping included. I didn’t need it but thought why not.

Enter the Broken Nikon D80

At the start of this year, a friend handed me their old Nikon D80, declaring it’s dead. The camera would fire, the mirror would slap, but it constantly flashed an “Err” code. A bit of research showed this is a common D80 problem. There is a fix, but it involves a full teardown and use of a soldering iron neither of which I was keen to attempt. I had no confidence I’d get Humpty Dumpty back together again.

The Bodge Job

I noticed that if I held the mirror up manually, the shutter would fire. A blob of Blu Tack kept it in place well enough. With a lens attached, it worked… about half the time. Removing the lens made it behave again, which pointed to the aperture activation lever causing trouble. After some tinkering, I settled on a bent piece of thin metal to hold it down.

So now I had a camera with:

• no live view
• no viewfinder
• no metering
• no autofocus
• no electronic aperture control

That’ll do the Trick

But I did have a Nikon 28mm f/2.8 AIS. On a crop sensor that’s roughly 42mm I figured: zone focus at f/5.6–f/8, and maybe this could work. And I finally had an excuse to use the Ulanzi waist‑level finder that had been gathering dust for months.

Shooting With It

Surprisingly, it worked. I usually carry a tripod because I shoot a lot of woodland scenes and because it’s handy to have a big metal stick if a dog gets a bit lairy. Being free of that weight was refreshing. Looking down into a waist‑level finder instead of at a screen or through a viewfinder changed the whole feel of shooting. It felt more organic, almost like using an old film camera but without the stress of wasting frames. Depending on your point view, that could be a downside.

Probally my favourite photo of these trees I’ve tried many times to capture them and never quite got something I was please with until now

Quite a crop on this one

Thoughts on the Ulanzi Finder

I’m not sure I’d fully recommend it for film cameras unless you’re happy to crop a little or risk missing the edges. Framing slightly wider is the safest approach. It’s only off by a bit, and with more testing you could dial it in. For digital, where you can fire off a few extra shots, it’s no big deal. At the 50mm framelines you’re only using a small portion of the viewfinder, but it’s still usable. The screen is bright enough, not ideal in a dark woodland at sunrise, but perfectly fine in open daylight.

Final Thoughts

A broken camera, a cheap viewfinder, and a bit of Blu Tack turned into a surprisingly fun way to shoot. It slowed me down just enough to enjoy the process, and it reminded me that photography doesn’t always need to be precise or polished to be rewarding.

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About The Author

By Max Tiraquon
Taking pictures since 2017, mostly landscape and woodland.
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Comments

Shubroto Bhattacharjee on Ulanzi WLF – A Waist‑Level Experiment With a Broken Nikon D80

Comment posted: 09/05/2026

Well done, Max!
Is the image reversed laterally (left for right) when using the Ulanzi WLF, as in a TLR?
Happy shooting!
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Max Tiraquon replied:

Comment posted: 09/05/2026

Yes image is reversed as you describe

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