Formerly presspass
Member
Specifically, how do you get your gear ready for winter and do you have some gear that works well and others that do not?
In my case, working with 35mm black and white film photography, I tend to use older mechanical Nikon SLR cameras - F and F2 - because they function easily when I'm wearing gloves. I do put the AR-1 raised shutter releases on them. On the other side of the issue, my Barnack rangefinders are pretty much restricted to indoor use. They work well in the cold, but I'm not coordinated enough to keep my gloved fingers away from the spinning shutter speed dial and setting the f stop on some lenses - 35mm f3.5 Elmar specifically - is almost impossible with gloved fingers. If I'm shooting in the snow, I also make sure to take an incident meter. Do any of you choose your gear specifically for outdoor winter use?
In my case, working with 35mm black and white film photography, I tend to use older mechanical Nikon SLR cameras - F and F2 - because they function easily when I'm wearing gloves. I do put the AR-1 raised shutter releases on them. On the other side of the issue, my Barnack rangefinders are pretty much restricted to indoor use. They work well in the cold, but I'm not coordinated enough to keep my gloved fingers away from the spinning shutter speed dial and setting the f stop on some lenses - 35mm f3.5 Elmar specifically - is almost impossible with gloved fingers. If I'm shooting in the snow, I also make sure to take an incident meter. Do any of you choose your gear specifically for outdoor winter use?

