RE: traveling with expensive camera kit

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Thanks for all your help on this,  lots for me to think about and work on,  I'm thinking of having a play with a D-Lux 4 next week, see if the image quality is what I'm after.  Will send a link to my travel gallery when it's up.

Cheers

Andrew


www.andrewbrooksphotography.com


Date: Sun, 22 Feb 2009 08:38:29 +0700
From: trevor@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx
Subject: Re: traveling with expensive camera kit
To: photoforum@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx

Andrew,

Living abroad, I do my share of traveling. Security has always been an issue with me. How do I keep my camera secured around my neck? What type bag do I use? Is it safe to leave my camera in my room? Etc...The reality is that there are thieves EVERYWHERE, and that you could always drop your camera in water, sand, or a hard surface.  The best thing is consider your destination, be aware of people and your surroundings, and you'll be fine.  However, nothing spells security like a nice bag.  For a while, I'd been carrying a Lowepro Specialist 85-AW, purchased because it had a secure belt strap and I liked being able to access my gear without removing the bag.  Unfortunately, it turns out that living in the tropics and having this big belt holding a bulky bag against your body makes you a little sweaty. Thus, without the belt, the ergonomics were all off. For my recent sojourn in Cambodia, I purchased a Crumpler Whickey and Cox. This is a backpack style camera bag that carries my D200 with handgrip, three lenses, and small video camera with docking station, my filter wallet, sensor cleaning gear, battery recharge gear and extra battery, my laptop, and its AC adapter. The laptop was the selling feature for me since the bag's construction and arrangement allows the bag to fit nicely as carry-on and it's tough as nails while keeping your precious nice and safe.  It was such a relief to be able to have my laptop with me so I could work on pictures before I went to bed that night, and not have to work through 30-40 GB of RAW images when I got home.  As for cards, it's really up to you, but i you have a lot of 1-4GB cards, you have more changing to do, but you don't lose everything if something happens to your camera or big card.

Hope this helps.

Andrew Paul Brooks wrote:
Hi,
     Just after some ideas and advice on traveling as a photographer.  Me and my girlfriend are planning on doing a multi stop world tour,  and I really would like to travel with a good quality dSLR  but I have some worries about safety.  Does anyone have any good tips and advice.



Also I picked up a Cannon G9 with the idea of this being my travel camera,  as it's quite small,  but I've found the images quality is not really as good as I'm looking for,  can anyone recommend a compact which has images quality of a digi SLR(I have a D300 so would like a compact approching that)



Also any tips on file storage when traveling,  I tend to get through 8gig memory cards very quickly which creating getting the RAW elements to create my images ( http://www.andrewbrooksphotography.com/ )


Cheers in advance for any help


Andrew


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