I’m afraid my camera won’t zoom in for my seat with this be allowed?? 😓

9 comments
  1. I think I had that exact same one a few years ago. It was ass but cheap so I thought I’d give it a go. Idk how much worse it would be with phones that have multiple cameras.

    As far as being allowed, I’m not sure.

  2. As someone who frequents Wrigley, I honestly do not think they will care. If you can go with binoculars, I doubt the security will care about this. If you had a professional camera, that is a different story. Also, if you have a newer iPhone with zoom, you’ll probably be fine. What section will you be seated? If you’re in the 100 level, you’ll be able to capture pictures of most stuff. Maybe not outfielders but just catch them running into the dugout. Anything at range will be hard to steady your camera on any ways.

  3. Realistically I doubt anybody would notice or care.

    Separately, are you ever going to actually look at pictures you would take with that? Seems like it won’t be very effective and you’d probably enjoy the memory of the game more than the pictures.

  4. From the Cubs website:
    [Cameras/Video Equipment Visitors are welcome to bring video and still cameras into the ballpark as long as they are not professional grade – this includes extended and removable lenses and camera attachments like microphones. Tripods are not allowed in Wrigley Field. Recordings may be used for personal viewing only. Any other use, distribution or commercial use is prohibited. Fans may not distribute any copyrighted game information without permission of the Chicago Cubs.](https://www.mlb.com/cubs/ballpark/information/guide)

  5. Can we focus on him staying he’s “going to Wrigley soon” when it’s November 2024…?

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