nadelewitz wrote:
How do you read info on a display....viewfinder, lcd or top of camera.....if the camera is upside-down?
Is this a real question?!?
Okay ...
I guess I will begin by asking
"How often do YOU need to look at your camera's controls when you are taking pictures?!?"Regardless, with
auto-this-and-that, all MOST people really need to do is choose the ISO to ensure the
'shutter speed' isn't too slow and then point-and-shoot.
If necessary, if a person is shooting with the camera upside down and
IF a person really needs to access-and-use the menu
THEN it would simply require the individual loosen one's grip on the lens & rotate the camera ...
... If the OP's granddaughter cannot grip the lens with her right hand, she can EITHER create a platform with her right thumb-and-index-finger on which the camera can be propped OR the camera can be propped on her right forearm ...
...
If-or-when she feels a need to read the menu, then she can grip the lens with her left hand and then rotate the camera while keeping her right hand/forearm underneath the camera.
BTW.
IF the camera has a viewfinder "bump" then the bump can nest in the gap between the thumb-and-index-finger ...
... If the lens is relatively heavy (
e.g., "vintage glass") compared to a contemporary lens, then the lens-and-camera can be balanced in a crook in the right elbow created by the forearm & upper arm.
OF COURSE, the 'safety net' of a neck strap is probably a good idea for most people, so the OP's granddaughter should probably use one, too.