Thanks for watching everyone! For the record, I really don't think it matters what's in my bag... 👉 Instagram: instagram.com/jamespopsys 👉 Twitter: twitter.com/jamespopsys 👉 Presets, Prints & Books: www.jamespopsys.com/store 👉 Newsletter: www.jamespopsys.com/newsletter 👉My Gear inc 5% off Kase Filters: www.jamespopsys.com/gear
Has your channel been hacked its just a lot of us have been getting congratulations you've won a prize messages from what looks like your UA-cam account
I recently discovered the peak design tripod you are using and by now love it. It seem like you have not discovered that the bottom of the middle rod can be taken off to reveal a smart phone holder. Once this bottom part is removed you can remove the middle rod. :)
It's funny how two people who use the same system and do photography in the Same field can choose completely different approaches to the gear. Choice is a beautiful thing. Greetings ❤️
For gloves I can recommend THE HEAT COMPANY. Super warm for the coldest of days and well suited for photography. And still I ended up using them for skiing as well so they are really the one in all gloves.
Thank you. Always am interested in what other photographers bring in their bag. I admit I try to use a smaller 35L Shimoda Explorer V2 and now also have the newest Shimoda Urban Explorer 25L for use in the city. Also now using a A7CR and A7CII and smaller lenses when I can. Take care.
James, this is absolutely crazy :D ... my rule number one is to be able to get packed below 44 lbs including (beyond all the camera gear aka batteries, cleaning, tripod, laptop, everything technical) all the outdoor gear like tent, sleeping stuff, all the clothing, cooking and even food included .. (yeah for few days, I mean 3-5) .. what you show in this video must weight ton
I think I’d need one of those Boston Dynamics robot dog things to carry that much in the weight in the mountains. Really been trying to reduce weight where I can these days as I’ve realised now much the weight of my bag influences my mood. I just enjoy having a small kit in my backpack so it feels like an adventure with photos as a bonus rather than a dedicated photo trip which inevitably 97% of the time would have ended in disappointment.
You are right what you carry in a camera bag isn’t all that important. What you do and the results matter. I’m down to a Olympus OMD 2 and a Pen f with two lenses. 40 to 150 and 14 to 40. No flashes, mostly no tripod, one shoulder bag. I’m 73 years old but not too bad off. I’m retired. Just the hike in the woods is a joy enough. Camera? Ehh? Maybe.
I saw this video, then remembered you made a similar one a while back (2018?) and rewatched it. What quickly grabbed my attention was the assortment of lens in both videos. The lens here look massive. I am in awe of your ability to hike to remote places, with such equipment, and still have energy to take pictures. On another note, I have watched a lot of your videos over the years. I've sort of taught myself photography (recreational) by following a lot of your advice. Best wishes to you and hope you continue to make such easy to digest, educational videos!
From a too-big Nikon to a G9 to an A7R IV with a battery grip; two other cameras; two tripods: Evolution or revolution? Good content, thanks! Hope the family is well. Have fun way down under!
Wow, how things change! I know the two things don't necessarily corollate, but if gear improves along with your photography, then you've come a long way! 😁
More or less the same as mine, apart from the cameras, lenses, tripods, laptop, batteries, chargers, microphones and filters........ Basically my bag is black also, and I've got a water bottle...... Like I said, more or less the same 😂
Love watching your videos and hearing how you think!! You did surprise me tonight when I happened onto one of your videos that touted your Four Thirds gear and mindset. Probably a coincidence but I was video hopping to see more of your adventures and Surprise Surprise it was your "What's in my Bag?" video from 6 months ago. And low and behold, there were two Sony Full Frames and all the support gear. You don't have to answer me on this one because I will be watching your recent video in a few minutes-the one where you explain why you switched to Sony etc. etc. I'm sure I will enjoy it etc. etc. I understand the iconic struggle of format-itis myself! the idea that the larger the sensor the better the potential is for more detailed prints vs. the more compact the system, the more flexibility one has to set up get the shots and move on. Well here goes. I'm clicking on it right now in the eastern USA and can't wait to here your thoughts. JE
Some great gear, very similar to mine. (PD Tripod & Strap, A7R IV, Grip, 20mm, 24-70mm). Only have the one camera, did ponder the 16-35mm but as so much overlap with the 24-70mm I decided to pair this with the Sony 14mm f1.8 for those ultra wide shots. My 20mm is often used as a super light weight option on its own with the A7R IV body, 20mm photography or 30mm (APS-C) video. As a wild camper/photographer I need to keep gear as minimal as possible. Balance between quality, size and weight. I use a Peak Design small cube for my gear, fits nicely into the top of a hiking style rucksack. Love the idea of the 70-200 GM2/teleconverter but at £3k this will have to wait. ATB, Ant 👍🏻😉
Honestly that 70-700 2.8 is a silly choice for landscapes.. I would get a much smaller and cheaper tamron 70-300, tamron 28-200 or something similar. It’s less bright, but will work for those essential telephoto landscape shots. For portraits, events, kids, indoor… the chunky 70-200 2.8 makes more sense
It seems we have flip flopped bags. I had the x50 and not am in a f-stop bag. I did wan to make a comment/warning. When you carry your MBP in your bag with that 70-200, foot up, make sure you put the MBP in a sleeve. I got some pretty deep gouges on my MBP because it can slide up in the puch and rub on that lens foot.
Of course, you can shorten the center column from the tripod, at the ball from the head if you put it on the side, there is a screw somewhere that must be released then you can simply remove the long part
Good point about redundancy. Any single point of failure is likely to bite at some time. If it was me, though, I'd probably have all that extra stuff in my suitcase rather than in my backpack.
Huge kit but hopefully saves on the gym fees as well as getting some lovely pics. Heard someone saying you can help to prevent dust on the A7R4 if u wait 2-3 seconds after switching off before u change lenses no idea how true that is.
I got lots of gear, some even redundant in some way (analog vs digital for example, large vs medium format) but 90 % stays at home or in the car. What I found the Most Important Thing Ever is to have the camera in your hand or ready to go in 2 seconds (from pocket or open shoulder bag or Peak Design Capture). That's the issue with photo backpacks, it's too much mental and physical effort to get the camera in and out. And there are fleeting moments you might miss as well. Limiting my gear increases my creativity personally, as I'll be looking for particular shots that match the one camera and lens I brought with me. Now if you're going on a photo trip to Antarctica then maybe 2 lenses (24-70 + 70-200 or 100-400) and a second battery. Makes very little sense to me to carry overlapping focal lengths for example (16-35 + 24-70 + 20 + 70-200 is madness) unless you're a UA-camr filming your adventures). With todays cameras you can also crop a lot, so you might not even need both 24-70 and 70-200 if you know most of your shots will be on the shorter end. I don't understand why you would not use the 2nd SD card to store a second copy of the RAW file. Those things do break.
Another great video, thank you. ***A tip regarding your gloves and the battery-grip........an alternative to that set up is to use your small tripod as a handle, screwed into the bottom of your camera. You lose the heavy weight of the battery-grip it's self, and you keep the spare battery in your pocket. I got the idea for after seeing a video of Steve McCurry using a camera with a grip screwed into the bottom of his camera. I believe he does that because he has an issue with the gripping strength in one of his hands. If you don't want to use your tripod for a handle, I believe there are some actual handles available on AZ, but why carry extra gear.
You have triple redundancy with reading your SD cards then, as you have the internal, then the dongle, and lastly you can just hook up your camera to the computer via usb c and both card slots mount.
Mmmmm that’s a dreamy setup. I’ve got the 16-35 GM and 24-70 GM currently. But I’m contemplating selling the 24-70 for something along the lines of a 70-200 4 or maybe the 70-200 2.8 mark 2. I’m thinking the 16-35 and 70-200 should be perfect for my backpacking/hiking trips.
When I worked in a professional kind of arena I would carry one Mamiya RB 67, 80mm lens ( which did everything I needed 90 percent of the time) portrait work. Then there was.a 180 mm and a 250 mm. Both big, both heavy. All this in s box…with a Graflex 400 watt flash controlled by a 5+ or - pound battery (sometimes 2). Portrait/wedding film photographer in the Midwest of the USA. Film! 20 rolls of Vericolor II usually. For luck, I carried a Canon F1 with a 50mm f1.4. I needed it on time because I hand forgot to bring film backs for the Mamiya! Two or three of those too. Oh, the 35mm film? Three rolls of Fuji 36 exposure (just in case). More? 2 tripods, beat up but work for the mass and weight of the RB. Carry it now? You are insane!
Good luck with your Antarctica journey! Mine, scheduled for late March, was cancelled for COVID. I've heard of people having to quarantine the entire trip ☹️ I hope yours goes splendidly, can't wait to see your photos
As a newbie to the game, I recently just got my first camera bag, so far I'm running my standard 18-55mm lens, 70-300mm Tamron lens, charger, extra battery, lens cleaning kit and a few ND filters & memory cards, I feel so fancy opening it up and having a browse lol. sadly I only have a cheap tripod from amazon atm ( its my next item to upgrade)
Hi James, this video came at a weird time as I was just watching your 2018 ‘what’s in my bag video’. Such a weird coincidence 🤣. Exited to watch this one now, keep up the good work 👍
that power extra aftermarket charger is a risk. if you know anyone with an oscilloscope have them check it's output. I've had a battery ruined by it's shotty output. the others I charged on the oem Lumix charger and those aftermarket batteries still hold up like the oem battery. those chargers are iffy imo.
THANK YOU. Wow that is a lot of gear. I have a sling bag, Camera, Lens, batteries, Little tripod, Charger, USb cable, Extra sd card. Weighs less then your baby Hahaha. i also don't hike mountains, dark, or travel. I started walking 2 mile loops away from my house in different directions. Kind of cool :)
Not a criticism, but based on your recent changes, one can only assume you're making a mint from this channel &/or you've recently come into an inheritance. ;-) Good for you! Enjoy your videos.
Wow, it’s quite surprising how much you can pack in your bag! I need to re-think how I pack mine (Atlas Athlete) but I use a Ronin SC gimbal to my vlogging Sony a6400 cam, which I find takes up a lot of space. Haha interesting and nice to know what gear you use now with your Sony set-up. Lately been looking at the PD tripod too.
Thanks for the tour. Looks like a nice enough pack, but its bulk/weight is exactly why I remain an adamant fan of MFT! Do you actually carry that in the field?! I have a LowePro ProTactic AW 450ii (25L, 2.85 kg/6.26 lb empty) but I mostly use that to carry gear on planes (as it easily fits my G9, four lenses covering 8-400mm (16-800 eq), Manfrotto Befree GT XPRO Carbon tripod, filters, flash/diffusers, plus a GX85 and FZ1000, Oly TG-5, multiple batteries/chargers for the four cameras, laptop, water bottle, food, and even some clothes and other stuff). When I'm actually shooting, my pack (that carries all of the G9-related bits plus the TG-5) weighs about 5kg/11 lb and it's so small I can climb technical rock/ice or make my way through heavy brush--no way that happens with anything larger/heavier. I guess it depends on where you're trying to go and what you're trying to shoot (in my case, potentially anywhere and anything).
I just flew into Whitehorse in the Yukon Territory and forgot my blower to clean the sensor at home, and for the life of me can't find my lens cloths. However, hoping to get some good photography on my drive north of the road opens up.
Get the platypus quickdraw water filter for your mountain walks. Just drink sheep wee and puddles on the way. Best thing I ever bought to reduce weight and not get thirsty. 👍
Great video, Love seeing what Pro Photographer keep in their bags. I recently brought the Sony G 20mm f1.8 lens and absolutely love it!! it's such a fun lens to shoot with, Also the PD tripod is a win.
*watches vid from four years ago* “I’m ditching all my heavy full frame stuff and going to m43”. Next auto play video “look at all the full frame gear I can fit into my enormous backpack”. Can’t wait to catch up on everything that happened between those two vids.
James - I've been watching your content for quite some time, and to echo the comments of others, it's impressive to see the progression of your gear... but, to me, the more impressive thing is that you've maintained your "everyman" personality and your humor. Love your stuff!
I'm not James but I live in Iceland and I use the PD travel tripod as my only tripod and it works great for me Only thing is that I change it to the spike feet in winter
I need a new backpack. My $60 Amazon special has served me well for the past four years, but it's showing its age. The Shimoda's price is a little too rich for my blood though. Have my eyes on a couple Lowepro backpacks as options. I typically pack an a7RIV, a7RIII, 24mm GM, either the Sigma 24-70 or the 50 2.5G if I want to keep it light and the 135 1.8 GM. If I want ultra wide or telephoto, I'll swap the 24 GM for the Sigma 14-24 Art and/or the 135GM for the 100-400 GM. Sometimes, if the mood strikes me, I'll leave all those lenses and pack some old Minoltas, Takumars and Soviet lenses and go all manual which is WAY more fun than you'd think. Edit: I have that same Ikea lamp in my living room. Great minds and all that.
Really can't tell if I envy or pity the life of the life of a pro having all of that stuff just for redundancy, I love having redundant tech but it seems like alot to keep tidy
So...you mention third party battery chargers. What's the liability if they ruin one of your Sony batteries? Will Sony still warranty the battery? (Small risk perhaps, but batteries aren't inexpensive either!)
It's funny how some photographers praise a camera or a lens because it's lighter by 100-200 grams but then they take with them lots of heavy accessories. Look at that power extension. No offense, but I would never carry that with me.
James: I'm ditching FF because I like being light Also James: So here's my new FF with battery grip, 2 very chunky lenses, 3 cameras, 2 tripods, a 12k backpack and more stuff than I can mention me: not jelous......not at all.......
I was actually kind of surprised that all that stuff, including the bag is less than 13 kg. Still, I imagine it gets a bit heavy by the end of the day. Interesting video, for sure.
Hi James. The thing with the center column on the peak design travel tripod. You can shorten it and use it near the ground. I do this for macro photography.
Great content as usual. I was wondering about you mac book pro 14". Is you 14" sufficient for photo and video editing or do you use an external monitor when editing or an iMac? Cheers, looking forward to your next video.
Do you know I had a s£#t load of Nikon stuff when I retired; D3, and quite a few lenses (actually can't remember how many!) and of course a bag to carry it all. This was 13 years ago and I'm not sure that the type of bag that James has here was available then, if it was I didn't know! Okay fast forward to the last year or so: I now have a G9 and four lenses that fit into a PD sling 6L, result. I can take ALL the focal lengths I could before but at least half the weight and bulk. Oh, and I rarely use a tripod, don't dis-like them though.
James, you skipped the supplies for the care and feeding of your pack mule. Or in your case, pack sheep! I aspire to NOT schlep so much, and have succeeded.
Hello mate, how's things? I need to talk to you (well, I need to talk to someone anyway,) about my gloves. They're called FGYTech photography gloves. They cost me £45, so not massively expensive but not cheap either. However, although they've got the proper fold-back fingers for your shutter finger, thumbs and second fingers on each hand, they're bulky and cumbersome and most of the time, even when my hands are freezing, I end up not even taking them with me! Do you think it's just going to be a case of getting used to them or could you suggest an alternative, bearing in mind I've already spent the £45! Cheers.
Thanks for watching everyone! For the record, I really don't think it matters what's in my bag...
👉 Instagram: instagram.com/jamespopsys
👉 Twitter: twitter.com/jamespopsys
👉 Presets, Prints & Books: www.jamespopsys.com/store
👉 Newsletter: www.jamespopsys.com/newsletter
👉My Gear inc 5% off Kase Filters: www.jamespopsys.com/gear
Why did you choose the Action X50 over the Explore V2 35L from Shimoda?
Has your channel been hacked its just a lot of us have been getting congratulations you've won a prize messages from what looks like your UA-cam account
In my bag right now.. space, in every bag in fact.. I've strewn everything all over my desk! But three of my bags would fit inside yours at once!!
I recently discovered the peak design tripod you are using and by now love it. It seem like you have not discovered that the bottom of the middle rod can be taken off to reveal a smart phone holder. Once this bottom part is removed you can remove the middle rod. :)
This comment should be pushed up I guess :-)
Not exactly the main focus of the video but I gotta say I really like the decor in the background.
It's funny how two people who use the same system and do photography in the Same field can choose completely different approaches to the gear. Choice is a beautiful thing. Greetings ❤️
For gloves I can recommend THE HEAT COMPANY. Super warm for the coldest of days and well suited for photography. And still I ended up using them for skiing as well so they are really the one in all gloves.
I used them for skiing and photography. Great!
Thank you. Always am interested in what other photographers bring in their bag. I admit I try to use a smaller 35L Shimoda Explorer V2 and now also have the newest Shimoda Urban Explorer 25L for use in the city. Also now using a A7CR and A7CII and smaller lenses when I can. Take care.
James, this is absolutely crazy :D ... my rule number one is to be able to get packed below 44 lbs including (beyond all the camera gear aka batteries, cleaning, tripod, laptop, everything technical) all the outdoor gear like tent, sleeping stuff, all the clothing, cooking and even food included .. (yeah for few days, I mean 3-5) .. what you show in this video must weight ton
I think I’d need one of those Boston Dynamics robot dog things to carry that much in the weight in the mountains. Really been trying to reduce weight where I can these days as I’ve realised now much the weight of my bag influences my mood. I just enjoy having a small kit in my backpack so it feels like an adventure with photos as a bonus rather than a dedicated photo trip which inevitably 97% of the time would have ended in disappointment.
Most best digestible channel
You are right what you carry in a camera bag isn’t all that important. What you do and the results matter. I’m down to a Olympus OMD 2 and a Pen f with two lenses. 40 to 150 and 14 to 40. No flashes, mostly no tripod, one shoulder bag. I’m 73 years old but not too bad off. I’m retired. Just the hike in the woods is a joy enough. Camera? Ehh? Maybe.
I saw this video, then remembered you made a similar one a while back (2018?) and rewatched it. What quickly grabbed my attention was the assortment of lens in both videos. The lens here look massive.
I am in awe of your ability to hike to remote places, with such equipment, and still have energy to take pictures.
On another note, I have watched a lot of your videos over the years. I've sort of taught myself photography (recreational) by following a lot of your advice.
Best wishes to you and hope you continue to make such easy to digest, educational videos!
From a too-big Nikon to a G9 to an A7R IV with a battery grip; two other cameras; two tripods: Evolution or revolution? Good content, thanks! Hope the family is well. Have fun way down under!
Wow, how things change! I know the two things don't necessarily corollate, but if gear improves along with your photography, then you've come a long way! 😁
I could watch these types of all day. Been fascinating to see the evolution of your gear over the past few years.
More or less the same as mine, apart from the cameras, lenses, tripods, laptop, batteries, chargers, microphones and filters........ Basically my bag is black also, and I've got a water bottle...... Like I said, more or less the same 😂
Ah the most anticipated video of every year has arrived :). Great vid
I have always LOVED Shimoda and F-stop bags!
I cannot thank you enough for recommending this backpack a while ago! I got it based on your video and I LOVE it! It’s perfect!
Love watching your videos and hearing how you think!! You did surprise me tonight when I happened onto one of your videos that touted your Four Thirds gear and mindset. Probably a coincidence but I was video hopping to see more of your adventures and Surprise Surprise it was your "What's in my Bag?" video from 6 months ago. And low and behold, there were two Sony Full Frames and all the support gear. You don't have to answer me on this one because I will be watching your recent video in a few minutes-the one where you explain why you switched to Sony etc. etc. I'm sure I will enjoy it etc. etc. I understand the iconic struggle of format-itis myself! the idea that the larger the sensor the better the potential is for more detailed prints vs. the more compact the system, the more flexibility one has to set up get the shots and move on. Well here goes. I'm clicking on it right now in the eastern USA and can't wait to here your thoughts. JE
Some great gear, very similar to mine. (PD Tripod & Strap, A7R IV, Grip, 20mm, 24-70mm). Only have the one camera, did ponder the 16-35mm but as so much overlap with the 24-70mm I decided to pair this with the Sony 14mm f1.8 for those ultra wide shots. My 20mm is often used as a super light weight option on its own with the A7R IV body, 20mm photography or 30mm (APS-C) video. As a wild camper/photographer I need to keep gear as minimal as possible. Balance between quality, size and weight. I use a Peak Design small cube for my gear, fits nicely into the top of a hiking style rucksack. Love the idea of the 70-200 GM2/teleconverter but at £3k this will have to wait. ATB, Ant 👍🏻😉
Honestly that 70-700 2.8 is a silly choice for landscapes.. I would get a much smaller and cheaper tamron 70-300, tamron 28-200 or something similar. It’s less bright, but will work for those essential telephoto landscape shots. For portraits, events, kids, indoor… the chunky 70-200 2.8 makes more sense
I feel the same way about drone photography. I've seen incredible images from them but have no desire to use one myself.
Do you ever use lens caps? I noticed in the bag they all didn't seem to have caps on.
It seems we have flip flopped bags. I had the x50 and not am in a f-stop bag. I did wan to make a comment/warning. When you carry your MBP in your bag with that 70-200, foot up, make sure you put the MBP in a sleeve. I got some pretty deep gouges on my MBP because it can slide up in the puch and rub on that lens foot.
Of course, you can shorten the center column from the tripod, at the ball from the head if you put it on the side, there is a screw somewhere that must be released then you can simply remove the long part
Good point about redundancy. Any single point of failure is likely to bite at some time. If it was me, though, I'd probably have all that extra stuff in my suitcase rather than in my backpack.
That's a big bag!
Huge kit but hopefully saves on the gym fees as well as getting some lovely pics. Heard someone saying you can help to prevent dust on the A7R4 if u wait 2-3 seconds after switching off before u change lenses no idea how true that is.
I got lots of gear, some even redundant in some way (analog vs digital for example, large vs medium format) but 90 % stays at home or in the car.
What I found the Most Important Thing Ever is to have the camera in your hand or ready to go in 2 seconds (from pocket or open shoulder bag or Peak Design Capture). That's the issue with photo backpacks, it's too much mental and physical effort to get the camera in and out. And there are fleeting moments you might miss as well.
Limiting my gear increases my creativity personally, as I'll be looking for particular shots that match the one camera and lens I brought with me.
Now if you're going on a photo trip to Antarctica then maybe 2 lenses (24-70 + 70-200 or 100-400) and a second battery.
Makes very little sense to me to carry overlapping focal lengths for example (16-35 + 24-70 + 20 + 70-200 is madness) unless you're a UA-camr filming your adventures). With todays cameras you can also crop a lot, so you might not even need both 24-70 and 70-200 if you know most of your shots will be on the shorter end.
I don't understand why you would not use the 2nd SD card to store a second copy of the RAW file. Those things do break.
Good luck on your trip.
Another great video, thank you.
***A tip regarding your gloves and the battery-grip........an alternative to that set up is to use your small tripod as a handle, screwed into the bottom of your camera. You lose the heavy weight of the battery-grip it's self, and you keep the spare battery in your pocket. I got the idea for after seeing a video of Steve McCurry using a camera with a grip screwed into the bottom of his camera. I believe he does that because he has an issue with the gripping strength in one of his hands. If you don't want to use your tripod for a handle, I believe there are some actual handles available on AZ, but why carry extra gear.
You have triple redundancy with reading your SD cards then, as you have the internal, then the dongle, and lastly you can just hook up your camera to the computer via usb c and both card slots mount.
Mmmmm that’s a dreamy setup. I’ve got the 16-35 GM and 24-70 GM currently. But I’m contemplating selling the 24-70 for something along the lines of a 70-200 4 or maybe the 70-200 2.8 mark 2. I’m thinking the 16-35 and 70-200 should be perfect for my backpacking/hiking trips.
Good video. I got the Shimoda X50 a couple of months ago. Brilliant bag. Contemplating upgrading my A7iii at the mo. Dilemma though. A7R3a or AR4a.
Wow! Who would of thought there would be a camera in his bag ! 😉
When I worked in a professional kind of arena I would carry one Mamiya RB 67, 80mm lens ( which did everything I needed 90 percent of the time) portrait work. Then there was.a 180 mm and a 250 mm. Both big, both heavy. All this in s box…with a Graflex 400 watt flash controlled by a 5+ or - pound battery (sometimes 2). Portrait/wedding film photographer in the Midwest of the USA.
Film! 20 rolls of Vericolor II usually. For luck, I carried a Canon F1 with a 50mm f1.4. I needed it on time because I hand forgot to bring film backs for the Mamiya! Two or three of those too. Oh, the 35mm film? Three rolls of Fuji 36 exposure (just in case). More? 2 tripods, beat up but work for the mass and weight of the RB.
Carry it now? You are insane!
I have the same bag as your! I love my Shimoda action!
Good luck with your Antarctica journey! Mine, scheduled for late March, was cancelled for COVID. I've heard of people having to quarantine the entire trip ☹️ I hope yours goes splendidly, can't wait to see your photos
As a newbie to the game, I recently just got my first camera bag, so far I'm running my standard 18-55mm lens, 70-300mm Tamron lens, charger, extra battery, lens cleaning kit and a few ND filters & memory cards, I feel so fancy opening it up and having a browse lol. sadly I only have a cheap tripod from amazon atm ( its my next item to upgrade)
Geez, just watching this video gave me back pain ;P
New to following you on YT thanks for a great video of what's in your bag. I'll be on the Antarctica trip and look forward to meet you.
Hi James, this video came at a weird time as I was just watching your 2018 ‘what’s in my bag video’. Such a weird coincidence 🤣. Exited to watch this one now, keep up the good work 👍
James. If you want a smaller drone have a look at the Mavic Mini 2, TINY little thing and the image quality is pretty good
that power extra aftermarket charger is a risk. if you know anyone with an oscilloscope have them check it's output. I've had a battery ruined by it's shotty output. the others I charged on the oem Lumix charger and those aftermarket batteries still hold up like the oem battery. those chargers are iffy imo.
THANK YOU. Wow that is a lot of gear. I have a sling bag, Camera, Lens, batteries, Little tripod, Charger, USb cable, Extra sd card. Weighs less then your baby Hahaha. i also don't hike mountains, dark, or travel. I started walking 2 mile loops away from my house in different directions. Kind of cool :)
My wife also hates it when I put my Shimoda bag on the table and counter. 👍
Not a criticism, but based on your recent changes, one can only assume you're making a mint from this channel &/or you've recently come into an inheritance. ;-) Good for you! Enjoy your videos.
Have you done a photo workflow video recently with the new gear for lightroom, photoshop, as that can be helpful for new photgraphers?
The thumbnail for this video reminds me of your “ditching full frame” video. You are back to square one.
Wow, it’s quite surprising how much you can pack in your bag! I need to re-think how I pack mine (Atlas Athlete) but I use a Ronin SC gimbal to my vlogging Sony a6400 cam, which I find takes up a lot of space. Haha interesting and nice to know what gear you use now with your Sony set-up. Lately been looking at the PD tripod too.
So today you mentioned "Astro" with the 20mm 1.8 - can't wait until we see VLOGs! :)
Thanks for the tour. Looks like a nice enough pack, but its bulk/weight is exactly why I remain an adamant fan of MFT! Do you actually carry that in the field?! I have a LowePro ProTactic AW 450ii (25L, 2.85 kg/6.26 lb empty) but I mostly use that to carry gear on planes (as it easily fits my G9, four lenses covering 8-400mm (16-800 eq), Manfrotto Befree GT XPRO Carbon tripod, filters, flash/diffusers, plus a GX85 and FZ1000, Oly TG-5, multiple batteries/chargers for the four cameras, laptop, water bottle, food, and even some clothes and other stuff). When I'm actually shooting, my pack (that carries all of the G9-related bits plus the TG-5) weighs about 5kg/11 lb and it's so small I can climb technical rock/ice or make my way through heavy brush--no way that happens with anything larger/heavier. I guess it depends on where you're trying to go and what you're trying to shoot (in my case, potentially anywhere and anything).
I just flew into Whitehorse in the Yukon Territory and forgot my blower to clean the sensor at home, and for the life of me can't find my lens cloths. However, hoping to get some good photography on my drive north of the road opens up.
What RAM did you choose on the MacBook? I am deciding between the base 16GB or an upgraded 32GB for photo and video editing
Just googled the tripod expensive sheeeesh but looks so nice
Best of luck on the Antarctic trip !
is that a large core unit? whats it called? thanks!
Get the platypus quickdraw water filter for your mountain walks. Just drink sheep wee and puddles on the way. Best thing I ever bought to reduce weight and not get thirsty. 👍
Great video, Love seeing what Pro Photographer keep in their bags. I recently brought the Sony G 20mm f1.8 lens and absolutely love it!! it's such a fun lens to shoot with, Also the PD tripod is a win.
Hi James, fwntastic videos. Did you sell your a7C? Looks like its not in your gear list anymore.
*watches vid from four years ago* “I’m ditching all my heavy full frame stuff and going to m43”.
Next auto play video “look at all the full frame gear I can fit into my enormous backpack”.
Can’t wait to catch up on everything that happened between those two vids.
Try the Vallerret Milford gloves and why is my bag twice as heavy as yours.
Do you not use the falcam for the neck strap anymore?
Seemed a good idea to be fair.
And now a comparison to the weight/volume of equivalent Lumix G9 equipment?
Love my Shimoda X30, first saw them on your channel so I hold you personally responsible for the fact I handed over £350 for a bag!
I swear the top section was like the Tardis.
James - I've been watching your content for quite some time, and to echo the comments of others, it's impressive to see the progression of your gear... but, to me, the more impressive thing is that you've maintained your "everyman" personality and your humor. Love your stuff!
Hi James.
New to your channel and love it.
Thanks 🙏🏼
Happy that my break at work is when you post vids 😭 Great video so far James maybe we should get a house tour soon
I wondered if you still used the small tripod and then there it was! - Elaine
Great to see what you use and carry. Do you think the PD travel tripod is sturdy enough for windy conditions, such as Iceland?
I'm not James but I live in Iceland and I use the PD travel tripod as my only tripod and it works great for me
Only thing is that I change it to the spike feet in winter
Why the heavy/fast glass?
Are you not concerned with weight? Why not go for the f4 equivalent?
I just watched a video from an M43 Photographer using a Shimoda bag. If you had stayed with M43, your bag would smaller and lighter. Just saying.
I need a new backpack. My $60 Amazon special has served me well for the past four years, but it's showing its age. The Shimoda's price is a little too rich for my blood though. Have my eyes on a couple Lowepro backpacks as options.
I typically pack an a7RIV, a7RIII, 24mm GM, either the Sigma 24-70 or the 50 2.5G if I want to keep it light and the 135 1.8 GM. If I want ultra wide or telephoto, I'll swap the 24 GM for the Sigma 14-24 Art and/or the 135GM for the 100-400 GM. Sometimes, if the mood strikes me, I'll leave all those lenses and pack some old Minoltas, Takumars and Soviet lenses and go all manual which is WAY more fun than you'd think.
Edit: I have that same Ikea lamp in my living room. Great minds and all that.
Really can't tell if I envy or pity the life of the life of a pro having all of that stuff just for redundancy, I love having redundant tech but it seems like alot to keep tidy
Hi James, are you listening to music/audio books while out shooting?
Oy James! Is that the large core unit in the Action x50?
So...you mention third party battery chargers. What's the liability if they ruin one of your Sony batteries? Will Sony still warranty the battery? (Small risk perhaps, but batteries aren't inexpensive either!)
Sneaky fart at 5:03
It's funny how some photographers praise a camera or a lens because it's lighter by 100-200 grams but then they take with them lots of heavy accessories. Look at that power extension.
No offense, but I would never carry that with me.
James: I'm ditching FF because I like being light
Also James: So here's my new FF with battery grip, 2 very chunky lenses, 3 cameras, 2 tripods, a 12k backpack and more stuff than I can mention
me: not jelous......not at all.......
Hi James, what’s happen to your G9? Love yer channel 👍
looks like a lot of back pain)))) great gear
I was actually kind of surprised that all that stuff, including the bag is less than 13 kg. Still, I imagine it gets a bit heavy by the end of the day. Interesting video, for sure.
Hi James. The thing with the center column on the peak design travel tripod. You can shorten it and use it near the ground. I do this for macro photography.
I love the color of that wall. What is it called?
Great content as usual. I was wondering about you mac book pro 14". Is you 14" sufficient for photo and video editing or do you use an external monitor when editing or an iMac? Cheers, looking forward to your next video.
impressive, professional.
Do you know I had a s£#t load of Nikon stuff when I retired; D3, and quite a few lenses (actually can't remember how many!) and of course a bag to carry it all. This was 13 years ago and I'm not sure that the type of bag that James has here was available then, if it was I didn't know! Okay fast forward to the last year or so: I now have a G9 and four lenses that fit into a PD sling 6L, result. I can take ALL the focal lengths I could before but at least half the weight and bulk. Oh, and I rarely use a tripod, don't dis-like them though.
James, you skipped the supplies for the care and feeding of your pack mule. Or in your case, pack sheep!
I aspire to NOT schlep so much, and have succeeded.
Ah man. I haven't watched your channel for a while and I gotta say I'm pretty bummed you moved on from the Lumix
Why not RAW on both SD cards? I mean it is rare but they DO fail. Otherwise that's a pretty nice kit.
Maybe this should be titled "what's in the boot of my car"........long way and a lot weight since the G9 and 12-35 F2.8 days......
Love your content James. Do you use a VND for your video camera? Or the same Kase NDs ? Also do you bother with NDs for your GoPro? Cheers!
Thanks!
Plus the gps in the front strap pocket?
James, would you swap your GoPro for the DJI Action 2? Or any of the other DJI action cameras
Just got a 14” M1 MBP. Quick.
Hello mate, how's things? I need to talk to you (well, I need to talk to someone anyway,) about my gloves. They're called FGYTech photography gloves. They cost me £45, so not massively expensive but not cheap either. However, although they've got the proper fold-back fingers for your shutter finger, thumbs and second fingers on each hand, they're bulky and cumbersome and most of the time, even when my hands are freezing, I end up not even taking them with me! Do you think it's just going to be a case of getting used to them or could you suggest an alternative, bearing in mind I've already spent the £45! Cheers.
Would you see a point in 600mm (zoom) for anyting other than wildlife?
Have u got a team to carry it? Doubt Id ever leave home.