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It is for backpack company for a catalog.
It has been taken with Nikon D50, Nikkor 18-55, 2x Nikon SB-24.
Flash with umbrella was on tripod on the left and power was 1/4 ... perhaps 1/2. Other flash was on machine against ceiling (power 1/4). Desaturated background in Photoshop. Thanks for comments
This classic leather backpack is hand crafted from local cowhide that has been manufactured in a local tannery using the same methods and techniques that were used 100 years ago. The tool bag is crafted from 4,2 mm thick leather for extra hardness and durability. The bag has extra inner pockets - one for tablet, one for phone and extra one for keys or other small things. All components are custom dyed with Fiebings professional oil dye. Afterwards, the leather is treated with palm leaf wax and heated beeswax that gives it a vintage look. It is finished using acrylic leather sheen to protect against moisture. The bag is hand stitched using traditional two needle saddle stitch and a 3 cord, 1mm thick linen thread. It has antique finish high quality brass hardware.
The bag is made in cooperation with TREYDEN.
If memory serves, this backpack made to all 15 Cornerstones I attended, and the faithful Chair O'Love made it to the last 14 after a dalliance with a bag chair my first year.
This particular sight was seen a whole lot around the grounds over the last 14 years, and here, after the Choir's set, is probably the last. I'm heartbroken.
We found this backpack wrapped in a disintegrating tarp, hidden under conifers. It looked like it had been there for a year or more. Inside we found backpacking equipment: a rusted Whisperlite stove, cooking pot, swiss army knife and silverware, plus a soggy sleeping bag, long underwear, sweatpants and flip flops. We reported the find to rangers when we finished our trip. We are curious about the story behind it, but probably will never find out.
Company: Banpresto
Set: Backpack Pal
Year: ????
Size: Medium
Made in: Japan
Have any info we left out? Care to donate better photos? Let us know at pokeplushproject(at)yahoo(dot)com!
I know my backpack is heavy, I just never weighed it to know exactly how heavy it is - until today. It contains my laptop (and not a cute little one), my camera and supplies, my purse (wallet, cosmetics, hairbrush, hand lotion, etc.) and a bunch of other girl junk. Any guesses? P1070065
(See the photo from this day in 2010.)
The "Women Backpacking Together" Meetup met at the Caribou Lake Trailhead in the Caribou Wilderness in the middle of the night... around midnight. Lorrie and I were there around 7:30pm so after we put up our tent and built a fire, we warded off the bears by making a lot of noise. Four plus hours! We were up around 9am and out on the trail around 11am. Got to our camp at North Divide Lake around 3:30pm and set in for a cold night. Snow all around but we found a nice meadow to camp in.
Watching people get appropriate carriers, I decided I needed to jump on that bandwagon. I tried it out this weekend, but I think I need some longer bungee-straps for my Tripod (to make it immobile).
This is a TamRac Expedition 5.
This is one of our BackPacks, and you can choose to have your name monogrammed on it. There are lots of different fabrics to choose from at: DCRCreations.com
another backpack made out of second hand ingredients: vintage shirt, vintage leather jacket and secondhand belt. Went into good hands of Helena :)
The old backpack had a small problem: two sections only. The first one, to the back, was only useful to put the laptop. Everything else had to go into the open section.
There is a small outside pocket for quick access stuff.
Backpacking somewhere in Mississippi or possibly Alabama. (I didn't take this picture. I found it in a shoebox full of old pictures.)
Everyone has a place or two that they want to keep secret. This is definitely one of ours. Paul and I went back to an old stomping grounds for a week long backpacking trip to celebrate his 50th birthday. Our original route was cancelled due to a fire in the area, but Plan B turned out great. We caught some cutthroats, saw 5 black bear, 5 rattlesnakes, osprey, eagles, big Chinook salmon and the Perseid meteor showers. The weather was warm for carrying heavy packs, but at least a couple rain storms drenched us. There was a microburst that came through the area one afternoon, like a freight train, that had us watching multiple trees busting over. Luckily the tall cedars, douglas firs and ponderosa pines at our camp bent, but did not break. An awesome trip in an amazing place with a great friend.
This from is an experimental project I did with my illustration students at the university (UPB, Medellin). The idea was to see if we could customize Nike backpacks, what materials should be used and what results it could offer.
Nike donated the backpacks, and each student got to keep theirs after the project was done.
(The thing sticking out of the back pack is a another student project, from another class)
Keep in mind that I didn't actually make any of these, they're entirely the student's work.
These design details are built upon a good, functional pack, with a padded laptop pocket (which held the 15“ MacBook Pro that begat this story), additional pockets on the interior, an easy-access zippered top pocket for keys and whatnots, and a removable cellphone pocket for the shoulder strap. The size of the main compartment expands and contracts based on what you are carrying and is determined by how snugly you fasten the top.
Fully expanded, you can carry the aforementioned MacBook Pro, a 15 oz box of Cheerios, and have room left over for a couple of pounds of bacon and a bottle of orange juice, for a filling, nutritious, mobile computing breakfast experience. But the shape is a little odd (the bottom is tapered and smaller than the top, the ducktail contour being the culprit) and the interior pockets aren’t well-suited to bulky objects. So a bunch of work folders won’t sit perfectly in the pack, but hopefully they’ll be so excited about being on a motorcycle that they won’t mind.
The harness system is very comfortable, the firmly padded shoulder straps joined by a slender sternum strap to help carry the load. A removable waist strap helps transfers heavier loads to the hips. Properly adjusted, the pack is firmly connected to the wearer’s back, the load carried a little high but otherwise unperturbed at go-directly-to-jail velocities.
High quality materials are employed throughout - indeed, I used a prior Boblbee pack nearly daily for nigh on 4 years before one of the nylon buckles failed, I have no reason to believe that Meg Aero would be any less robust. As stated before the pack is built to withstand bumps and bruises, which, ironically, you try to avoid because it is so sleek looking.
Ultimately, this is one tight pack. Some of you may buy it because of its attitude and be surprised by its utility. Others of you may buy it because of its utility and tolerate its attitude. Whatever you do, just don’t take it to traffic court.
This from is an experimental project I did with my illustration students at the university (UPB, Medellin). The idea was to see if we could customize Nike backpacks, what materials should be used and what results it could offer.
Nike donated the backpacks, and each student got to keep theirs after the project was done.
(The thing sticking out of the back pack is a another student project, from another class)