Same here with a Ds...and I did the same experiment
with the same results.
My horizons fall from left to right, and I have the
same feeling of being unable to hold a camera
properly.

I also discovered that my first instictive reaction to
correct an horizon was to tilt the camera in the wrong
direction.
(if the sky falls from left to righ, you have to tilt
the camera clockwise, I tended to do the other way
until I noticed).

I had a similar problem with my MZ-5n, and I am also
thinking if the instant review contributes to this
impression.

It would be nice to hear form others experiences.

(BTW, Picasa is great correcting horizons, rotates and
crops at the same time).

 --- Glenn <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> escribió:

> Hi all,
> 
> For as long as I've owned my *istD, I've spent lots
> of time rotating
> and cropping pictures to correct the horizon. I
> always assumed that I
> was just sloppy when framing my shots. But I did a
> quick experiment
> recently where I carefully lined up the focus screen
> marks with
> straight horizontal lines and took some test
> pictures. The shots all
> came out about 1 1/2 degrees off from level. Is this
> a problem with
> the sensor alignment? Is the focusing screen or
> prism somehow out of
> position? Could any of these be fixed? Somehow all
> these possibilities
> bother me more than when I thought I just couldn't
> hold a camera
> level.
> 
> Glenn
> 
> --
> Love all, trust a few, do wrong to none.
> 
> 



                
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