I recently talked about some of what I carry when I travel to support my electronics, but today I want to focus on the items in my camera bag. These items are ready to go whenever I leaved the house with my digital SLR camera.
I'll leave out the camera itself, since when I travel that often spends more time around my neck than actually in the camera bag. I also left it out of the photo because I was using it to take the picture above. The rest of the items in my camera bag are as follows:
- An Extra Lens
- I still use the "kit" lens that I purchased with my camera years ago, a Canon 18-55mm zoom lens (pictured above). Lately, more often than not I've had a Sigma 30mm f/1.4 lens that I purchased on Ebay attached to the camera body
- Extra Batteries
- In addition to my digital SLR, I also often carry a point and shoot camera as a backup and a small video camera. Extra batteries for both these and the SLR live in my bag
- Battery Chargers
- Even carrying extra batteries doesn't mean I won't have to charge them before return home, so the chargers always come with me on the road.
- Extra Memory Cards
- Both CompactFlash and SD cards to accommodate the different cameras I carry
- Cables to Connect to a Computer
- Both the still and video cameras connect to my laptop via USB cable. I try to download whatever I shot before the end of each day to my computer in case I need to clear the memory cards, as a backup if something happens to my camera and/or memory card, and to see how the pictures and videos from the day turned out (in case there's something I may have a chance to reshoot before I return from wherever I'm traveling)
- Cable to Connect to a TV
- I rarely use this anymore, but there's still a cable with an RCA connector in case I want to plug the camera into a television and look at pictures
- Remote Shutter Release
- keeps the camera from wobbling when you're shooting on a tripod. It is very difficult not to move the camera a little when you actually press the shutter button, so this inexpensive device solves that problem. It's also a big help for long (bulb) exposures, so you don't have to hold your finger on the shutter button. Here's a link to the one I bought, but you can find similar items for your camera.
- Lens Cleaning Stuff
- I've been fighting a losing battle against dust and smudges on my lenses for awhile now, but some things that help are a lens cleaning pen, cloth, and wipes.
- Neutral Density Filters
- I have these mostly to allow longer exposures of fireworks photos, but any time a longer exposure is needed these are a great addition to the bag. I bought an expensive Hoya 77mm Neutral Density ND-400 filter a year ago, which I haven't really mastered yet, but I'm liking the adjustable NEEWER® 77mm (ND2 to ND400) filter I bought a couple months ago.
- Extra Lens Cap
- Though I have not yet actually lost a lens cap, I've dropped one in my backpack or otherwise misplaced one for an extended period of time on more than one occasion, so I finalized purchased a spare, though I now need another for my Sigma lens
- Cheap Poncho
- I've spent enough time in Orlando over the past year that it pays to be prepared if the weather takes a turn for the worse. This isn't very durable, but I got this four pack for under $5.
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