Archived posting to the Leica Users Group, 1999/01/26

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Subject: RE: [Leica] Re: Camera bags
From: "B. D. Colen" <bdcolen@earthlink.net>
Date: Tue, 26 Jan 1999 10:55:39 -0500

A couple of quick baggie thoughts - and I admit that I, too, am a bit of an
Amelda when it comes to bags of all types...

One thought is to carry the camera and to stick two extra lenses, a meter
and some film in any kind of little non-photo waist pack...I have a little
cloth and leather job from Orvis that works..I usually just sling it over my
shoulder...

Another solution is, for want of a better name for it, the all leather
mussett bag produced by Timberland....waterproof leather - tough as
nails...two front pockets...and I have a Billingham three-pocket padded
cloth insert inside the bag...this easily carries an M, three lenses, film,
meter, flash, note book, and a lot of other trash...it does NOT scream
camera bag...just shoulder bag...It is, as I noted, really tough and
definitely water proof...the only draw back is that, being leather it is
comparatively heavy for its size...but I've thrown a Domke shoulder pad on
the strap and I do find it to be a successful jury rig..

Now..the cost factor...the bag costs six arms and eight legs...but....for
those of you within hiking range of Boston/Cambridge...there is a shoe
store/leather place right off Harvard Sq. called the Tannery...it appears to
be owned/run by folks from somewhere in the middle east..I would guess
Lebanon....They Bargain....Ask them the price, they tell you, you then tell
them that that's ridiculous, and all the sudden you're hearing very
different numbers.....

Cheers....

Oh....Question for those who have made the leap to the Sekonic 508: Does it
do everything it is supposed to do? And is the spot metering really
accurate?

Thanks...

- -----Original Message-----
From: owner-leica-users@mejac.palo-alto.ca.us
[mailto:owner-leica-users@mejac.palo-alto.ca.us]On Behalf Of Paul C.
Brodek
Sent: Tuesday, January 26, 1999 10:14 AM
To: leica-users@mejac.palo-alto.ca.us
Subject: [Leica] Re: Camera bags


Dear LUGgers,

I have been trying to stay out of bag topics because, quite frankly,
what Imelda Marcos was to shoes I am to camera bags.  Pity the poor
LUG addict, not wanting to feed the monkey, and all that.  My
resistance is plumb wore down.  The new LowePro stuff, unfortunately,
looks interesting.  Thanks for the link, Darrell---I think. :-}

I wanted to mention a few bag ideas, mainly for those interested in
maximum compactness and/or mobility....

If you're lucky enough to have a collapsible lens for your Leica, you
can fit a body (with lens collapsed), moderate strap and very compact
light meter into a padded lens case.  I have a Tamrac Extreme Series
(70cm tall x 8cm wide), I think it's supposed to be for a 35mm
telephoto or medium format lens.  LowePro looks to have some cases
that might also work.  The Tamrac has a very sturdy rear loop that
secures at the bottom with velcro and snaps, allowing you to hang it
from your belt or attach it to other bags.  Doubles as a lens pouch;
also good protection for when you need to shove your camera into
another less-protected bag.

Staying with the collapsible lens theme, the newish Billingham
Stowaway Pola bag (21.5cm tall x 20cm wide x 6.5cm deep---the short
but wide one) will fit a body/lens/strap with room for two
back-to-back coupled medium length lenses or one 135mm, plus compact
meter and a couple rolls of film.  No internal dividers, so the lenses
need to be in a pouch, and keeping the meter and extra film in the
main compartment can make it a bit jumbled, but it makes a nice, small
package.  Loops on the back to attach to a belt, but the weight could
lead to trouser drop, which would allow me to clean my lenses with
yet-to-be-retired underwear....

Last hint makes use of all your internal bag divider detrius.  I
haven't found a photo-specific waist/fanny pack that has the quality
strap/suspension setup you find on hiking/climbing waist/fanny packs
(Mountainsmith, Osprey, Overland, etc---Mountainsmith's fancy name for
bum bag, by the way, is Lumbar Pack).  But the hiking/climbing bags
offer little or no padding.  Until you toss in your spare Tamrac,
Domke, LowePro, Billingham, etc dividers.  Then you get padding plus a
bag that stays put when you want it to.  Not so important to me when
I'm driving or taking public transit, but when I'm cycling or hiking
there are times I want my bag to stay out of the way better than the
photo bags do.

Later,

PB


On Tue, 26 Jan 1999 08:52:05 -0000, "Wood, Darrell (London)"
<wooddar@MLE.CO.UK> wrote:

>To those interested.
>
>I have been looking for a flexible camera bag outfit for years for all
>occasions.  I have just purchased some of the new Lowpro Street & Field
>series.  I would recommend it.
>
>http://www.lowepro.com/Default.htm
>
>Hope this is usefull.


Paul C. Brodek
Kobe, Japan
pcb@iac.co.jp