![]() I'm impressed you managed to live out the 21L, though. Just one big volume inside, that I can add the camera cube to and then pack as I choose, not as WANDRD has assumed. It's still my favourite bag, but I'd love to see an ultralight version with just the roll top, side opening (with no tiny pocket with the little holder inside), back opening and water bottle holder. If you don't have the things designed to go in them, or would rather carry them elsewhere, they just get in the way and add unnecessary weight/complication I find all the different sized pockets, dividers and holders irritating - they're prescriptive and limiting. Everything was okay! Not even a new scratch on anything! ![]() It had everything I own in it, and thousands of dollars worth of gear. ![]() The bus literally flipped over and my bag went flying. Oh, and one last thing - I was in a bus accident with this bag. Tripod (either in the side pocket, or strapped to the bottom. Two speedlights and accessories for them. Sometimes I have 2 Fujifilm bodies and a couple analog bodies. Gear I have put in it include: 3 Fujifilm bodies and 3 lenses of varying sizes. It fits my gear really well, with still plenty of room in the top compartment for everything else I need (clothes, books, toiletries, etc). I am 5’3” and I am not overly consumed by the bag. It also doesn’t look like a camera bag, so when I’m moving around cities, I don’t feel like I stand out as a target for theft. I love all the different pockets, especially the hidden passport pocket. It comes with camera straps which can be used as a sling, or can be attached to the bag itself. The insert comes out so I can use it in different bags when I need something smaller. It’s still in incredible shape, you wouldn’t even guess it’s been used as much as it has. Review and notes: I’ve had this bag for three years, and have slogged it all around the world - including living out of it exclusively for two years. Granted that’s my issue, but I just feel like instinctually, it should be on the other side. I also will always go for the wrong side to get in to the side access pocket. Durable (can withstand crazy amounts of roughing up seebelow)Ĭons: The straps sit at a strange angle on me, so I have to occasionally pull it back up on my shoulder. Name: WANDRD PVKE (21L or 31L) I have the 21L I went through a lot of different backpacks and messengers, and this was the first one that has everything I needed. You won't carry gear to an NFL match with this, but if you're going to be walking all day with a lot of lightweight gear, and you don't want to look like a tortoise (or Quasimodo) this is the one to get. Review and notes: Highly recommended if you are a mirrorless camera user (or if your camera is small, like a Canon SL1) and looking for a travel camera bag that fits reasonable setups. The tripod straps are quite small, and probably won't hold larger tripods (I use a Sirui travel tripod, and it fits perfectly). It would hold some more junk if it had more depth (can't fit my Switch in its case #firstworldproblems). Oh, and it opens from the back, which was one of the most important things I was looking for in a travel backpack.Ĭons: The gray canvas model doesn't seem much resistant to rain (I would prefer to not use the rain cover in light rain - the black nylon model looks as if it would be a bit more harder to soak). ![]() Also has space for other stuff (including a tablet), side pockets, front pocket, inside pockets, tripod straps etc. Holds a ton of gear (I travel with an A7II with 2 zooms including a 70-200 + a prime with space left. Pros: Light and very small form - and thus, comfortable. Use: Travel/hiking backpack for mirrorless
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