Oh, Hayden. I heard somebody say that coming inside when its warm in your house or car, but cold outside (like on rainy days) will cause your camera to condensate, and encourage mouod growth inaide the lens. The antidote is to put it into its bag before you get inaide, and do not open it for a few hours. Let the temperature equilibriate SLOWLY.
I have the 75-300mm from canon. It is definitely the most affordable option to get a good amount of zoom. However I always found it was not a sharp lens unless shot at f8 with good conditions. If you’d like, send me a message on instagram and I can show you some of my old photos with that lens @hayden_therrien Thanks for watching!
I dont know about camera bags, maybe they are made of different materials, but my normal backpack gets saturated in very light rain. I would never put my laptop in there, and not my camera and batteries either. Bags woth an in-built rainfly are the most trustworthy. Just whip it out of the tucked away, and nothing in theres getting wet, even if you put the bag down on mid or wet grass
"One of my favourite marshes"
Huh. Must be a photographer. Or a birder.
Oh, Hayden. I heard somebody say that coming inside when its warm in your house or car, but cold outside (like on rainy days) will cause your camera to condensate, and encourage mouod growth inaide the lens.
The antidote is to put it into its bag before you get inaide, and do not open it for a few hours. Let the temperature equilibriate SLOWLY.
That’s another good tip, thank you
keep it up bro, btw do you thing that 75-300mm lens is good for taking photos of birds?
I have the 75-300mm from canon. It is definitely the most affordable option to get a good amount of zoom. However I always found it was not a sharp lens unless shot at f8 with good conditions. If you’d like, send me a message on instagram and I can show you some of my old photos with that lens @hayden_therrien Thanks for watching!
I dont know about camera bags, maybe they are made of different materials, but my normal backpack gets saturated in very light rain. I would never put my laptop in there, and not my camera and batteries either.
Bags woth an in-built rainfly are the most trustworthy. Just whip it out of the tucked away, and nothing in theres getting wet, even if you put the bag down on mid or wet grass
hi, what is your camera bag ?
In this video I am using the National Geographic sling bag.