If your post says how many days you will be "in country" I missed it. Personally, I have to work really hard to shoot an entire 36 exposure roll in one day, but that's just me.I'm torn on how many 35mm rolls to bring, I'm stuck between 5 color and 5 bw, or just 5 total.
I'm thinking maybe buying and bringing a 116 camera to finally use a 1946 expired Verichrome for what I really wanted: brand new architecture.
Here is what you are telling yourself you should do:it hasn't been uncommon for me to bring several different cameras on vacations, but this time, I want to keep it light. My obvious choices are my ricoh xr2s [...] I can just use my phone to take pictures and assure my parents I'm not going to get murdered [...] I want to discipline myself, but I don't know how crazy I'm going to go once I get there.
Here is what you are telling yourself you should do:
- Put a 35mm lens on the Ricoh XR-2s, and that will handle 80% of all travel shots.
- Forget about the other 20%. Just let it go. No should'a, would'a, could'a. You are on vacation, not on assignment for National Geographic.
- And you'll still have your phone for Plan B.
And that is all. Seriously. Discipline!
How long are you going for & what's your destination. Aug 22 I took film to Europe with me and near the end of my trip when i got back to Paris I bought more.....& had it processed there. You have to watch for the new scanners but there are ways to deal with that issue.
How long are you going for & what's your destination. Aug 22 I took film to Europe with me and near the end of my trip when i got back to Paris I bought more.....& had it processed there. You have to watch for the new scanners but there are ways to deal with that issue.
If your post says how many days you will be "in country" I missed it. Personally, I have to work really hard to shoot an entire 36 exposure roll in one day, but that's just me.
Most people agree that traveling light is an excellent concept! And then we take too much stuff anyway.
Here is what you are telling yourself you should do:
- Put a 35mm lens on the Ricoh XR-2s, and that will handle 80% of all travel shots.
- Forget about the other 20%. Just let it go. No should'a, would'a, could'a. You are on vacation, not on assignment for National Geographic.
- And you'll still have your phone for Plan B.
And that is all. Seriously. Discipline!
Truthfully, I am a total hypocrite for suggesting this, because I've never had the discipline to do it myself. My most austere travel kit was a Fuji mirrorless APS-C camera with a 16-50mm zoom. Not counting extra battery and charger -- about 550 grams. Not bad, if I had stopped there. But I had to go and ruin it by also taking a 50-230mm zoom "just in case." This was a walking tour in France, not a wildlife safari, so needless to say, I carried that stupid tele-zoom on my back for a month, and I hardly used it at all. I'm older and wiser now.
Most recent overseas trek was a Rhine cruise augmented with a few days in the Swiss Alps (Lauterbrunnen). This was with my wife and another couple; e.g., not primarily a photo expedition. I took my Yashica Mat 124G and about two dozen rolls of film split between 400TX and HP5 Plus which I swapped between to not have all my eggs in one basket, given the backing paper bugaboos. The rest was a small shoulder bag (Domke F-5XB) for my Canon EOS M-5 with its 18-150 kit zoom and a bunch of 32 & 64 GB cards. Back at our room I had some 128 GB USB thumb drives and a module that enables transfers between SD cards and USB drives for backup. Plus my iPhone 6s from which I got a few short video clips -- going through locks and such.
That was more than enough for the 11 or so days we were gone. I also had my Voigtländer Perkeo II folder and a Canon G15 P&S, which stayed in the suitcase,- for backup. Had I been by myself on a self arranged tour I might have shot more film, but I find it tedious when in a group (much of our sightseeing was guided tour as part of the cruise).
I took similar gear on a 3.5 week auto tour from the Philadelphia area to Arizona & Utah. I did shoot more B&W film on that trek, no doubt because there were more railroad museums and excursions on the plan-as-you-go itinerary intersecting my interest in Olde Rust.
This says "masochist" to me.
The trick is not to bring so much equipment that it weighs you down and that you loose too much time thinking about what to use. Learn to concentrate on the pictures you can take with what you have and not the ones you could have taken with something left at home.
For me, it’s no vacation if I take more than a simple camera. Otherwise, it’s a photo shoot, something quite different.
I think you should take as much camera equipment as you can possibly carry. I like the idea of going out and buying even more equipment before you leave. Of course, you may need a larger camera bag or backpack, but you probably need a new one of those anyway. I recommend the ones whose straps can also be used as a cilice. For a one week vacation to Poland, five rolls of black and white and five rolls of color are more than enough. In fact, you might want to cut back on film to save weight.
My best travel photos came from an old Konica C-35 rangefinder camera. It had a sharp 38mm 2.8 Hexanon lens w/ AE and a meter readout in the VF. Being so small and light meant it was w/ me every place besides the hotel bathroom or bed. Easy to tuck away if you're in a dodgy area too. It also had exposure lock w/ a half press of the shutter button, so it was very quick to shoot and nail the exposure every time. One little camera means more room for film.
The one time I deviated from that and brought a Nikon n80 w/ a 28-200 GED lens (which is a great lens and very small and light) turned out to be my worst travel photos. I seldom needed anything w/ that reach, and the more it was zoomed the more light I needed. Since I also needed a higher shutter speed for longer focal lengths and didn't always have it, combining that w/ boat or car movement gave me quite a few less than stellar pics.
Just recently spent time in Dublin. I was concerned about the scanner issue, but at the airport (Newark) the TSA people agreed to hand inspect my film and did it fairly quickly. (They were a little bit flummoxed--I've had a smoother ride at SeaTac, but never mind that; they did the job.) I took the film to Conn's Camera in Dublin where they souped, scanned and uploaded to a google drive for about 12 euro. I ran out of film and they didn't have any Portra 160 so I went up to John Gunn's camera shop and he had loads of it. So I can verify that film shooting and processing is alive and well in Dublin.
I used to take my F2 when I travelled but having been warned not to check any baggage, I decided to travel light and took my Rollei 35. Turned out to be a great choice--I'd forgotten what a sharp lens it has and how easy it is to use, especially for street shooting.
The only hassle was on the return flight, which took me through Heathrow. For some reason they made me go through two scanners, so I was glad that I didn't have any film in the duffel bag.
The best advice I can give is to travel as light as you can and don't check your bags.
I went to Italy for about 2 weeks last May with some fellow art students. Since I was our documentarian, blogging everyday, I used my phone for that. But I wanted to do some street photography and took along my Minolta SRT-201, the 50mm lens, and a half dozen rolls of B&W film. I guess it depends on what you plan to photograph.
Travel by airplane:
Travel by car - I just take everything and pull out the lens or lenses that I need for a location
- Hasselblad with the 80mm and 50mm lenses plus the SWC with multiple backs with a choice of films or
- Two 35mm Nikon SLRs, one for color and one for black & white, 20mm to 35m AF zoom lens and 28mm to 300mm AF zoom lens, 28mm PC manual lens
If I travel with family and wanted to enjoy vacation, I only take one 135 camera body and one lens. This summer I did a month long European family vacation with Nikon FA body and 50/1.2 lens. I did about 10 rolls of film: mostly color negatives, plus some slides and B&W. Now we all have smartphones with very capable cameras, quick snapshots and indoor shots are often better with the phone.
When I was traveling with my wife alone, I took just a Rolleiflex. Large negative size, no choice of focal length, and max quality.
When I was doing photo trips with friends in my younger years, I traveled with two bodies (one with wide angle, one with long zoom) plus one 50mm lens. And tripod even. I was shooting almost entirely on slides.
Dang it, I wanted to guess!
I take one camera, one lens and make it work. As for film, I think about 1 roll for every two days. Sometimes it's enough, sometimes it isn't. I like that the constraints make me really think before taking a picture.
While the C220 is more camera than a Rolleiflex, I would heartily recommend bringing it - I've hauled my Rolleis around with me to France, Italy, and Mexico and gotten some of the best shots of my life with them. But I would keep it simple- just the C220 with a normal and maybe a wide lens, and as much film as you can carry. It is almost impossible to bring too much film, especially when going on what may be a once-in-a-lifetime trip. The good news is, if you do run short, you should still be able to get more in Poland. It's not like you're going to Africa or Latin America where film is hard to come by.
THIS IS THE TRUTH.
Unless you have specific shots or events in mind, keep your kit small.
(Also, airport security staff in some backwater places (like, say, Dallas) have never even seen roll film, and might demand to open it, especially when you come along at the scanner with gallon-sized ziplocs full of exposed treasure)
We use cookies and similar technologies for the following purposes:
Do you accept cookies and these technologies?
We use cookies and similar technologies for the following purposes:
Do you accept cookies and these technologies?