Guth
Appreciative User
Far more often than not I would choose a 35mm lens. But depending on the nature of the trip, other choices might make more sense.
It seems this thread is all about 35mm cameras, so, to be contrary (me?), I'll put in my two cents for my Rolleiflex 3.5. It's become my exclusive travel camera, and by default its 75mm lens has become my exclusive travel lens. You could think of it as a 50mm in 35mm format, but it's not at all the same thing, really.
Gee I wonder just why you would say that ... 😈Fifty One Point Six.
I just came back from a trip to the Japan Sea side area around Ishikawa Prefecture.
I took a Fujifilm X-T5 camera with a Fujinon XF23mm f1.4 lens and a XF16-80mm f4 zoom. I used both about equally during the trip, however, if I could have only taken one lens it would be the 16-80mm zoom; it is so perfect for travel. But, a zoom lens is probably not a suitable answer to the OP’s question so I’d have to say the 23mm which is a FF Eq of 35mm.
My wife used my compact Fujifilm XF10 camera which is a FF Eq of 28mm (f2.8 macro) . It's also a great rig for travel.
Mike
That is a serious butt-load of cameras to schlepp around! Which gets us to "one lens, one camera". Last time I travelled by plane, back to the East Coast for a vacation (Provincetown, MA), I restricted myself to just the Rollei and a very compact, light-weight carbon fiber travel tripod. A meter, Rolleifix, and cable release rounded things out. It was a revelation! First of all, I arrived relaxed and not exhausted (not much beyond flip-flops and a bathing suit in my luggage); dragging tons of junk through an airport is exhausting for anyone at any age, and at age 72... Second, I did not feel in any way limited by the choice of camera. A very valuable skill I've learned is to "see" in terms of the camera you have in hand, so the frustration of not being able to "get the shot" essentially disappears. The limitation becomes freedom. I highly recommend that everyone try it!Agree entirely. For several decades I travelled with a Rolleiflex. It did everything I needed and wanted it to. And had the added advantage of while not being exactly super light with film added to the pack, it didn't take up a whole lot of room in my minimalist travel bag (one small Holdall and one backpack). In fact it was lighter and a bit smaller than the Nikon D800 I nowadays take with me.
I last took a 'flex with me in 2011 when I went to Indonesia, Sarawak and Taiwan. This was a black body T with a 16 exposure kit. I left the branded leather case at home and wrapped the TLR in a towel. A strap, a generic hand grip, a lens hood, a UV and an orange filter (I did mostly B&W back then) and that was it. Also film, IRRC 40 rolls of mixed color and mono, and that was it. The hard-earned $$ we all spent on film in those days, sigh. Not to forget the endless evenings of scanning we now have to do. Again, sigh.
I love the Rolleis, but as Prest_400 has written the so-called 'standard' (75mm-80mm) lenses on most TLRs may not be the ideal focal length for most travel images. These days they no longer suit me. For general purposes again as Prest_400 has wisely said, a little wider but not too wide is best. I like my Nikon 20 and 24 but they clutter up my landscapes too much, so they are my least used lenses. I go with 28 and 85. The other lenses are there for the 'if' moments, which now rarely happen for me.
For me, happily long gone are the '70s and '80s wanderings I did with multiple format kits. In 1985 I took a Nikkormat and four lenses, a Rollei, and a Linhof 6x7 with two lenses and two bags, also a Linhof tripod which sensibly stayed mostly in my case at my hotels. I've written about this before, so suffices to say I did 90% of my photography with the Nikkormat and 28/3.5 or 35/2.0 lens. The 105/2.5 and 135/3.5 Nikkors saw no use at all and to this day I wonder if I had taken leave of my senses (assuming I then had any senses) to take them along...
The Buddhists say less is more. From my own life experience I've changed that to suit me, to less is less. As it should be. Less is also best, in all ways.
That is a serious butt-load of cameras to schlepp around! Which gets us to "one lens, one camera". Last time I travelled by plane, back to the East Coast for a vacation (Provincetown, MA), I restricted myself to just the Rollei and a very compact, light-weight carbon fiber travel tripod. A meter, Rolleifix, and cable release rounded things out. It was a revelation! First of all, I arrived relaxed and not exhausted (not much beyond flip-flops and a bathing suit in my luggage); dragging tons of junk through an airport is exhausting for anyone at any age, and at age 72... Second, I did not feel in any way limited by the choice of camera. A very valuable skill I've learned is to "see" in terms of the camera you have in hand, so the frustration of not being able to "get the shot" essentially disappears. The limitation becomes freedom. I highly recommend that everyone try it!
That is a serious butt-load of cameras to schlepp around! Which gets us to "one lens, one camera". Last time I travelled by plane, back to the East Coast for a vacation (Provincetown, MA), I restricted myself to just the Rollei and a very compact, light-weight carbon fiber travel tripod. A meter, Rolleifix, and cable release rounded things out. It was a revelation! First of all, I arrived relaxed and not exhausted (not much beyond flip-flops and a bathing suit in my luggage); dragging tons of junk through an airport is exhausting for anyone at any age, and at age 72... Second, I did not feel in any way limited by the choice of camera. A very valuable skill I've learned is to "see" in terms of the camera you have in hand, so the frustration of not being able to "get the shot" essentially disappears. The limitation becomes freedom. I highly recommend that everyone try it!
An important aspect. I do this automatically, and never feel limitations because I only look for subjects doable with the given equipment.A very valuable skill I've learned is to "see" in terms of the camera you have in hand,
Oh wow, as a Berliner myself, I‘d give a lot for the chance to spend a week in gritty 1980s Berlin.Yes, 40 mm is great. I took some of my best travel shots ever in Berlin 1980 (Ilford XP-1) and India 1990 (Kodachrome 64) with a Rollei 35 LED (Triotar 3.5/40).