rick.osgood
Senior Member
You are identified as a newbie by using the Nikon yellow strap AROUND YOUR NECK rather than a black shoulder strap and having a lens cap on the lens.
Ha... I will take that one
You are identified as a newbie by using the Nikon yellow strap AROUND YOUR NECK rather than a black shoulder strap and having a lens cap on the lens.
I use this Black Rapid wrist strap and attach it to the strap-lug on the camera body using a split-ring. You can attach the strap via the tripod socket as well, I just prefer to use the strap-lug. This strap makes it surprisingly comfortable to carry even my D750 (battery gripped) with a big, 70-200mm f/2.8 attached for long periods.Who makes a decent wrist strap or should I just skip it and hope the clutz monkee does not get me?
Possibly, but you do have to consider how much gear you can travel with. I assume you're not driving and won't have the opportunity to take too much gear. If you are on any public transportation, take the gear that you can carry. You really don't want to check you camera gear on a trip.Thanks all... I am overthinking this...
Possibly, but you do have to consider how much gear you can travel with. I assume you're not driving and won't have the opportunity to take too much gear. If you are on any public transportation, take the gear that you can carry. You really don't want to check you camera gear on a trip.
WM
I read a statement somewhere from a pro photographer that they can spot a newbie a mile away because he/she has all or most of his camera gear with them. A real pro only takes what is needed. Well, as a newbie, I am not sure what I will need at any time so I bring it all in a backpack. Case in point, I will be going to Costa Rica in November and want to shoot people, birds, landscape and macro. I believe I need to carry everything but don't want the "Newbie" label. How do you pro's decide what to bring when in a diverse location?
Thanks