Europe on a small kit

zauhar

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Just got back from a trip to Europe with the family, four days in London and four in Paris. There has been a lot of discussion of compact kits recently, so I thought I would chime in one what I carried and why.

Here is what I had on me at all times:

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The small Tamrac bag holds a IIIf with collapsed summitar, and M3 with 21mm SA, and a light meter (I had a second meter in my pocket). I had the divider arranged on a diagonal, and this combination fit snugly but comfortably. I kept B&W film in the IIIf, color in the M3. My rationale was that I was more interested in color shots of museum interiors and of architecture, and in both cases the wide lens would be better. The IIIf was for street shots where I prefer B&W anyway.

The small belt bag held a summicron DR and Canon 50/1.4. I sometimes switched to the DR for closeups and a few color portraits, and I sometimes substituted the 50/1.4 for the summitar, as it is very sharp when opened.

I want to attest that this worked out reasonably well - the little bag didn't break my back over ten days of pretty strenuous touring on foot, and my strategy was all-in-all OK; for a lot of cramped interior shots I would have had less interesting views without the 21mm, and I am comfortable with 50 for outdoors.

Drawbacks: The 50mm DR is I think my best lens, and it did not see much use with this strategy. If the 50/1.4 is on the IIIf, it really will not fit in the bag with the M3 (likewise there is trouble if the the M3 has the DR attached). Another problem is that on a few shots yours truly was moving quickly and forgot to extend the summitar! So I know I will be kicking myself for some "periscope" shots.

I shot 32 rolls over ten days, which I think is on the "low" end (~1,000 images, bet I would have had 5X that with a digital). I was the only film photographer I encountered throughout the entire trip, and I did have some envy of the ease with which the digital crowd was collecting images at a furious pace. They also were not propping themselves for a 1 sec exposure in Notre Dame (although I chimped over their shoulders and was not very impressed with the quality of what I saw). Somehow I felt right about what I was doing.

Randy
 
and I did have some envy of the ease with which the digital crowd was collecting images at a furious pace.

Yes, but you will have seen something of europe while they will have seen little more than the viewfinder of their camera. Been there, done that, went back to film after that trip.
 
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