pachuco
El ****
Ballistic Nylon. It seems to be more water resistant and so far I have used it in very harsh conditions without any problem. This is with a DSLR and RF in the bag.
Merkin
For the Weekend
I acknowledge the technical superiority of nylon, but I only use cheap canvas satchels from the army surplus store, as they are a lot more discreet. Nylon camera bags look like camera bags.
Trius
Waiting on Maitani
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Al Kaplan
Veteran
At one point I had a bag made out of old blue jeans. I guess it would be stylish again now!
Chris101
summicronia
A couple years ago I got in the habit of stapling a few paper grocery bags (the kind with handles) together, then throw my camera stuff in there, and put some laundry on top of the cameras and lenses. I could leave that bag anywhere and be assured that it would still be there, unmolested, when I returned.At one point I had a bag made out of old blue jeans. I guess it would be stylish again now!
I got out of the habit when the bags finally ripped through and dumped my laundry - AND CAMERAS on the ground.
It was embarrassing.
kshapero
South Florida Man
I find canvas a little rough for my underwear, so I guess I'll go with the nylon ones. But I really prefer silk.Which do you prefer? If other, please specify.
Benjamin
Registered Snoozer
Wax, always.
michaelging
Established
I only use canvas bags,like a post above said, I spray several coats of water proofing spray on my Domke's and never had wet lenses.
Turtle
Veteran
Canvas. Ballistic nylon is a very good substance for making tough stuff from but it has a nasty feel to it.
I think the canvas dust issue is overblown. You have synthetic inserts in a Domke and an clean them out once in a while anyway. Unless you shoot only in cities, much more dust is going to come from the great outdoors than the break down of canvas.
I think the canvas dust issue is overblown. You have synthetic inserts in a Domke and an clean them out once in a while anyway. Unless you shoot only in cities, much more dust is going to come from the great outdoors than the break down of canvas.
rbsinto
Well-known
My SLR bag is a Tenba 995 that I bought about 25 years ago. Made from coarse Nylon woven material that wears like iron, except that the edges fray. I just sew them closed, and keep on going. It was quite expensive for the time (over $300.00 as I recall, but in retrospect worth every penny).
A few months ago I found another one that had been used by a camera store for rentals. I bought it for ten dollars, got new interior dividers and plastic hardware from Tenba for $25.00, and after some do-it-myself repairs to fix it up, keep my rangefinder kit in it.
A few months ago I found another one that had been used by a camera store for rentals. I bought it for ten dollars, got new interior dividers and plastic hardware from Tenba for $25.00, and after some do-it-myself repairs to fix it up, keep my rangefinder kit in it.
nikon_sam
Shooter of Film...
Whatever material they use for military backpacks...I get my bags from the local military surplus store...just picked-up a new one last week...this one's for the Mamiya 645 stuff...
PMCC
Late adopter.
Billingham Fibrenyte. Look and feel similiar to their "Storm Block" canvas, but is a tougher, lighter synthetic fiber laminate. Sage color replaces olive.
samoksner
Who stole my light?
Ballistic Nylon is awsome stuff, it's tough, bright, strong, washable, very weather resitant. It doesn't tear or have it's stiches go and get nasty brown after it gets wet.
Roger Warren
AddlepatedWight
I use canvas because, just like my camera I want to feel comfortable with the bag.
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