Saturday, January 24, 2009

Lowepro Vertex 100 Review: Part 1


I will post a follow up, Part 2, once I've returned from a week of roaming Europe in mid-February. My previous bag is a Tamrac Adventure 7. A great bag IMO but I can't carry all of my lenses, flash and an extra body in the bag. I'm going to keep the Tamrac for the time being.

Everything fits in the Lowepro very nicely and I still have plenty of room for some of the smaller items in the zippered pockets on the outer flaps.


I really dig the tripod attachment. It's fully adjustable and for the first time I will have my hands free instead of lugging around my tripod, dropping it to shoot, etc...
Fully configured with lenses, flash and Notebook the bag is heavy!

It does not sit as nicely with just using one shoulder strap like I got accustomed to with the Tamrac. Because the bag is quite deep a good bit of the weight extends beyond the plain of your back.
The true test of this bag is how it feels (comfort) and it's usefulness after use during one of my road trips. I'll be visiting Vienna beginning of February and doing quite a bit of shooting on the weekend. Stay tuned for Part 2.

Lowepro Vertex 100 w/ Monopod
Lowepro Vertex 100 open w/ Gear

Saturday, January 17, 2009

More gear for the weary photographer traveller


I already have 3 trips to Europe scheduled for Q1 and managed to slot in a few extra days here and there for photo shoots and sight-seeing.

In prep I used up some membership points, got myself some gift cards to Amazon and upgraded my bag and added a monopod. Being delivered next week will be a
Lowepro Vertex 100 AW Backpack ($180), Manfrotto 680B Monopod ($55) with a Manfrotto 486RC2 Compact Ball Head with RC2 Rapid Connect System ($70).

I'm toying with the idea that I might be able to take all of my lenses along now as well as my laptop for work (which is essential). We'll see when the gear comes how everything fits together.



Monday, January 5, 2009

Happy New Year


I reaped a fine amount of booty this holiday season, "aahhrrr!" Some of it photog related. The best (that doesn't attach to a camera) was from my girlfriend who got me a copy of Scott Kelby's latest book on Adobe Photoshop Lightroom 2. I'm only a tenth of the way into the book but it already has rewarded me with some good tips on Lightroom. I'd recommend it for those just starting out. I've only got about 1-1/2 years of Lightroom experience and most of it is fairly rudimentary.

The remainder of my holiday break has been to complete my summary of work titled Retrospective 2008. I'm preparing a set of large format 2009 annual calendars and a book using Blurb's BookSmart software for friends and family. Hope to have it all complete in January. If you're a close friend you might get one free. Links will be posted here once they are available for purchase.

It has been an immense amount of work and I will be changing how and when I post process images for 2009. To give you some flavor of the task, in 2008 I shot approximately 7700 images totaling over 45 Gbytes. All of that boiled down to a set of acceptable images for print of exactly 549 images totaling 2.89 Gbytes. Of those only a smaller amount will make it to print of course as I further refine and select for appropriateness.

It is a labor of love because I can expect to actually sell none of it. And in learning Lightroom 2 I also want to return to my 2007 library of images and process them down to a 2007 Retrospective publication. Again another 7200 images and roughly 32 Gbytes. These will be a bit more challenging because I didn't shoot in RAW for most of 2007, and Lightroom treats JPG images different from RAW.