Tethered shooting gives you instant large-screen preview, client review in real time, and a permanent capture record on your laptop. Once you've worked tethered, going back to the back-of-camera screen feels like a step backward.
What You Need
- A camera with USB-C tethering (Sony A7, Canon EOS R, Nikon Z, Fujifilm GFX, Hasselblad)
- A dedicated tethering cable — not a charging cable
- A laptop running Capture One, Lightroom, or native camera software
Step 1: Cable First, Software Second
Connect the cable, switch the camera to PC Remote mode, then open your capture software. Use a dedicated tethering cable — not the USB-C cable from your phone charger.
Step 2: Camera Settings
Set USB connection mode to PC Remote (Sony), EOS Utility (Canon), or equivalent. Set your capture folder in the software before firing a single frame.
Step 3: Secure the Cable
The cable needs to be secured to the camera body — not just plugged in. As you move around your subject, cable tension goes directly into the USB-C port without a secondary anchor.
The Loloboo Tethering Block mounts to your Arca-Swiss quick-release plate and locks the cable in position. Cable tension is absorbed by the block, not the port. One-minute install.
Step 4: Route the Cable Cleanly
Run cable to one side of the shooting area — not across the floor. Use cable clips on C-stand legs to route it up off the floor. Leave enough slack to move 180 degrees around your subject without pulling taut.
Step 5: Test Before the Shoot
Fire 10 test frames, verify they land in Capture One with correct folder structure and metadata. Check live preview is updating. Do this the day before — not 10 minutes before the client arrives.
Recommended Software
- Capture One — industry standard. Deep camera integration, real-time preview, color tools.
- Adobe Lightroom — solid for photographers in the Adobe ecosystem.
- Native apps — Canon EOS Utility, Sony Imaging Edge, Nikon NX Tether. Free, less workflow integration.
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