Midwinter
parkour to you
Hello everyone, first post from a long time reader of these forums. I've been curious for some time as to what others cameras look like on the way home from extensive/arduous travel. It seems like some folks may have their cameras carried around behind them in litters for the condition they are in and I cannot imagine that shooters don't often find themselves in more adversarial conditions.
Here is my much loved R2 after a week and a half long trip paddling through the boundary waters of Minnesota. If I had kept it in a bag it would definitely gotten very VERY wet (saw its share of splashes being around my neck.) So lets see your camera before its had a fair chance to get home and have a "bath"!
http://www.rangefinderforum.com/photopost/showphoto.php?photo=164603
Here is my much loved R2 after a week and a half long trip paddling through the boundary waters of Minnesota. If I had kept it in a bag it would definitely gotten very VERY wet (saw its share of splashes being around my neck.) So lets see your camera before its had a fair chance to get home and have a "bath"!
http://www.rangefinderforum.com/photopost/showphoto.php?photo=164603
Roger Hicks
Veteran
To quote the late Colin Glanfield, "There are those who can cover a war, and come back with their cameras looking as if they've been for a walk around the block, and others who can go for a walk around the block and come back with their cameras looking as if they'd covered a war."
Cheers,
R.
Cheers,
R.
rbsinto
Well-known
My cameras (SLRs or rangefinders) look the same coming home as they did leaving home; scratched, dinged and brassy.
My only concern is whether they are functional. Their aesthetics don't matter one bit.
My only concern is whether they are functional. Their aesthetics don't matter one bit.
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