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I was in need of a new camera bag - my old one had reached its capacity, and I wanted to be able to expand. So while I was in the City yesterday, I went to B&H - www.bhphotovideo.com/ Not only was the B&H staff friendly, but they were knowledgeable as well. I was shown a few different bags and backpacks, and settled on this model from Lowepro.

 

Not only does this bag meet my needs, with room to spare, but it was over $100 less expensive than the bags and backpacks I had seen while browsing online the other day.

 

As I wrote the other day, www.flickr.com/photos/slgc/5518026696/ , B&H is unsurpassed in Internet order customer service. However, there's nothing like a trip to B&H in person if you need some guidance about cameras and camera equipment.

© Lillehammer 2016 / Cathrine Dokken - All rights reserved.

Mermaid backpack seen at Target 07/17/2018

Backpack made entirely from leather with dragon head and wings. Entry for Dragon Con 2102 Art Show

www.etsy.com/shop/Finelineworkshop?ref=si_shop

Osprey Escapist 20L Backpack. In this photo it's full of my 2013 gear that I had just taken a picture of.

New Nike SB Backpacks arrived just in time for back to school

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prepping for two week adventure trip

Crumpler Belly backpack, size L, in orange/white. This is a model not sold in the USA (I bought it from a store in the UK). It is an extremely well made backpack that will surely last a very, very long time. The quality of the materials is first rate. The shape and two-tone appearance is pleasingly unusual.

 

My "day pack" sized backpack of 15+ years finally had it and so I began my search for a replacement. There are SO MANY choices out there today, it's mind boggling. I had a hard time finding something that I liked for combined visual appeal, great utility, comfortable design, and solid quality, all at a reasonable price. A friend of mine tipped me off to a company named "Crumpler", which I'd seen once before but thought they only did small bags, like ones for cameras. They have a rather limited backpack line here in the USA, most of which are meant to carry cameras and then reconfigure for carrying other items if you wish. But in Europe, they have a number of other designs that you cannot get in the USA. The "Belly" is one of them. Weird name, I know. "Hey, check this out--I've got a belly on my back!" ;-)

 

Thankfully I found a source in the UK that could ship to the USA. And I happened to catch them with a great discount, as the Belly model has been discontinued. So, despite the high overseas shipping cost, I still got a great deal. The "orange/white" scheme was the only color left in size L (the M-medium size was just a little too small for what I wanted). It took me a while to warm up to the orange/white scheme as I thought the white was too much, but then I saw some customer photos on-line that showed the white to be more subdued. Thankfully, it is!

 

This is the kind of backpack I could see owning for the next 30 years, unless it gets lost or irreparably damaged somehow. It is so well constructed, that with decent care it should last a lifetime. It's a very distinctive style you just don't see anywhere else, and I've never seen this color combination before. Not that I'm a "unique style" monger, mind you. ;-)

 

Anyway, Crumpler is a personal bag company started by a man named Stuart Crumpler, in Australia. Go to their website to read up on the guy and the company back story. It's pretty neat. And the founder seems to be still actively involved with the designs.

Penguin backpack complete in the "Little Things To Sew-Along"

 

alittlegray.blogspot.com/2011/09/lttsa-backpack-link-up.html

 

Next month we make the bias trim apron.

I’ve been wanting to take a city break in summer, rather than in the cold months for a while, so rather than heading for the Lake District for a week of toil on the fells when Jayne could get a week off, we took off from Liverpool for Paris. Flight times were nice and sociable but it meant we were on the M62 car park at a busy time in both directions – it’s a shambles! I’ve stopped over in Paris a dozen times – on my way to cycling in the Etape du Tour in the Alps or Pyrenees – and had a few nights out there. Come to think about it and we’ve spent the day on the Champs Elysees watching the final day of the Tour de France with Mark Cavendish winning. We hadn’t been for a holiday there though and it was a bit of a spur of the moment decision. Six nights gave us five and a half days to explore Paris on foot. I had a good selection of (heavy) kit with me, not wanting to make the usual mistake of leaving something behind and regretting it. In the end I carried the kit in my backpack – an ordinary rucksack – to keep the weight down, for 103 miles, all recorded on the cycling Garmin – and took 3500 photos. The little Garmin is light and will do about 15 hours, it expired towards the end of a couple of 16 hour days but I had the info I wanted by then. This also keeps the phone battery free for research and route finding – I managed to flatten that once though.

 

What can I say – Paris was fantastic! The weather varied from OK to fantastic, windy for a few days, the dreaded grey white dullness for a while but I couldn’t complain really. We were out around 8.30 in shorts and tee shirt, which I would swap for a vest when it warmed up, hitting 30 degrees at times, we stayed out until around midnight most nights. It was a pretty full on trip. The security at some destinations could have been a problem as there is a bag size limit to save room in the lifts etc. I found the French to be very pragmatic about it, a bag search was a cursory glance, accepting that I was lugging camera gear, not bombs around, and they weren’t going to stop a paying customer from passing because his bag was a bit over size.

 

We didn’t have a plan, as usual we made it up as we went along, a loose itinerary for the day would always end up changing owing to discoveries along the way. Many times we would visit something a few times, weighing the crowds and light etc. up and deciding to come back later. I waited patiently to go up the Eiffel Tower, we arrived on Tuesday and finally went up on Friday evening. It was a late decision but the weather was good, the light was good and importantly I reckoned that we would get a sunset. Previous evenings the sun had just slid behind distant westerly clouds without any golden glory. It was a good choice. We went up the steps at 7.30 pm, short queue and cheaper – and just to say that we had. The steps are at an easy angle and were nowhere near as bad as expected, even with the heavy pack. We stayed up there, on a mad and busy Friday night, until 11.30, the light changed a lot and once we had stayed a couple of hours we decided to wait for the lights to come on. This was a downside to travelling at this time of year, to do any night photography we had to stay out late as it was light until 10.30. The Eiffel Tower is incredible and very well run, they are quite efficient at moving people around it from level to level. It was still buzzing at midnight with thousands of people around. The sunset on Saturday was probably better but we spent the evening around the base of the Tower, watching the light change, people watching and soaking the party atmosphere up.

 

Some days our first destination was five miles away, this is a lot of road junctions in a city, the roads in Paris are wide so you generally have to wait for the green man to cross. This made progress steady but when you are on holiday it doesn’t matter too much. Needless to say we walked through some dodgy places, with graffiti on anything that stays still long enough. We were ultra-cautious with our belongings having heard the pickpocket horror stories. At every Café/bar stop the bags were clipped to the table leg out of sight and never left alone. I carried the camera in my hand all day and everywhere I went, I only popped it in my bag to eat. I would guess that there were easier people to rob than us, some people were openly careless with phones and wallets.

 

We didn’t enter the big attractions, it was too nice to be in a museum or church and quite a few have a photography ban. These bans make me laugh, they are totally ignored by many ( Japanese particularly) people. Having travelled around the world to see something, no one is going to stop them getting their selfies. Selfies? Everywhere people pointed their cameras at their own face, walking around videoing – their self! I do like to have a few photos of us for posterity but these people are self-obsessed.

 

Paris has obviously got a problem with homeless (mostly) migrants. Walk a distance along the River Seine and you will find tented villages, there is a powerful smell of urine in every corner, with the no alcohol restrictions ignored, empty cans and bottles stacked around the bins as evidence. There are families, woman living on mattresses with as many as four small children, on the main boulevards. They beg by day and at midnight they are all huddled asleep on the pavement. The men in the tents seem to be selling plastic Eiffel Tower models to the tourists or bottled water – even bottles of wine. Love locks and selfy sticks were also top sellers. There must be millions of locks fastened to railings around the city, mostly brass, so removing them will be self-funding as brass is £2.20 a kilo.

 

As for the sights we saw, well if it was on the map we tried to walk to it. We crossed the Periphique ring road to get to the outer reaches of Paris. La Defense – the financial area with dozens of modern office blocks – was impressive, and still expanding. The Bois de Boulogne park, with the horse racing track and the Louis Vuitton Centre was part of a 20 mile loop that day. Another day saw us in the north east. We had the dome of the Sacre Couer to ourselves, with thousands of tourists wandering below us oblivious of the entrance and ticket office under the church. Again the light was fantastic for us. We read that Pere Lachaise Cemetery or Cimitiere du Pere Lachaise was one of the most visited destinations, a five mile walk but we went. It is massive, you need a map, but for me one massive tomb is much the same as another, it does have highlights but we didn’t stay long. Fortunately we were now closer to the Canal St Martin which would lead us to Parc de la Villette. This was a Sunday and everywhere was both buzzing and chilled at the same time. Where ever we went people were sat watching the world go by, socializing and picnicking, soaking the sun up. As ever I wanted to go up on the roof of anything I could as I love taking cityscapes. Most of these were expensive compared with many places we’ve been to before but up we went. The Tour Montparnasse, a single tower block with 59 floors, 690 foot high and extremely fast lifts has incredible views although it was a touch hazy on our ascent. The Arc de Triomphe was just up the road from our hotel, we went up it within hours of arriving, well worth the visit.

 

At the time of writing I have no idea how many images will make the cut but it will be a lot. If I have ten subtly different shots of something, I find it hard to consign nine to the dark depths of my hard drive never to be seen again – and I’m not very good at ruthless selection – so if the photo is OK it will get uploaded. My view is that it’s my photostream, I like to be able to browse my own work at my leisure at a later date, it’s more or less free and stats tell me these images will get looked at. I’m not aiming for single stunning shots, more of a comprehensive overview of an interesting place, presented to the best of my current capabilities. I am my own biggest critic, another reason for looking at my older stuff is to critique it and look to improve on previous mistakes. I do get regular requests from both individuals and organisations to use images and I’m obliging unless someone is taking the piss. I’m not bothered about work being published (with my permission) but it is reassuringly nice to be asked. The manipulation of Flickr favourites and views through adding thousands of contacts doesn’t interest me and I do sometimes question the whole point of the Flickr exercise. I do like having access to my own back catalogue though and it gives family and friends the chance to read about the trip and view the photos at their leisure so for the time being I’m sticking with it. I do have over 15 million views at the moment which is a far cry from showing a few people an album, let’s face it, there’s an oversupply of images, many of them superb but all being devalued by the sheer quantity available.

 

Don’t think that it was all walking and photography, we had a great break and spent plenty of time in pavement bistros having a glass of wine and people watching. I can certainly understand why Paris is top of the travellers list of destinations.

 

See my full review at theory.isthereason.com/?p=2242

 

Women love designer handbags, I love gadget bags.

 

My latest is the BUILT laptop backpack which is organic and minimal in form.

 

It's always risky buying something of this nature, since you'll never know how it conforms and presents itself on your body.

 

So far so good, lots of carrying space for accessories, though it can get tight lengthwise for my 17" MacBook Pro.

 

Got mine "large" from Koyono.com at a sale price.

Random stuff that caught my eye.

Hand luggage from my trip to the hills a few things are missing.

Brick Lane, London

Nikon Z7ii, Voigtlander 35/2/5 Color Skopar

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A small excercise in off-camera flash. The ribbon on the backpack is the St. George's ribbon — one of the most recognized and respected symbols of military valor in Russia. (More info: Russia Honors War Heroes as May 9th Approaches)

 

Info for strobists: Falcon Eye strobe bounced off an umbrella @1/8, camera right; Sigma EF 500 Super @1/32, camera left and behind the backpack.

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