More and more as I move into what my beloved partner likes to call "over the hill and a fair way beyond" (= past 70), I find that, as cameras go, less is better. I've done architectural photography for many years, but never with big cameras, only 120 and 35mm without swings, tilts or other fancy bits. I'm now doing much less of this, and when I do it's more selective, mostly colonial architecture in Asia and not every new building I come across.
I still intend to travel around Asia this year and the next, but I'm now much more concerned with carrying less photo gear.
On my next trip, I'll take a digital camera (maybe of my Nikon Ds), but not as the base of a multi-lens kit as I did before, and definitely not a D700, it's heavy enough to sink a ship. this year a Fuji X-whatever with two lenses may be on my radar.
In the past I've shot overseas with a Rolleiflex and lately a Rolleicord Vb, but for my next journey in midyear, film-wise I want to go ultra-light.It pleases me to see so many here praising the Voigtander Perkeos. I have a Perkeo I with a Color-Skopar lens and I find it an ideal camera for me to travel around. (I realize this is very much a multiple-choice option and what suits me may not really be your type of shooter, but my basic point is we have so many options here.)
The Color-Skopar lenses produce results I often think can be compared to small (6x6) engravings, they are that sharp.
If only the Perkeos could be adjusted to shoot 16 on 120, my preferred travel format.
More and more in my travels I meet people, some very young, who have taken to the notion of KISS. My partner's sister, recently retired from a lifetime of teaching lecturing, is now in Europe, shooting with her Kodak Retina II or III (the f/2 lens model). She easily buys films and get her films processed almost everywhere and she sees more film shooters than ever. I've seen her posts (photo shops in France and Germany can apparently process and scan as a one-day service, wow!) and her images are truly outstanding.
There are many options out there for in-the-pocket film cameras, the Retina and the Perkeo are ony two of a long list. A friend uses a circa 1950 Zeiss Nettar on loan from me, to shoot landscapes in Tasmania. His results (I scan them when I'm home from my wanderings) are not quite as technically good as with the Perkeo, but he is doing very fine work.
So as the great Ella Fitzgerald sang (was it really so long ago?), "things are looking up" - for film shooters.