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General Photography
What to take on a cruise
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<blockquote data-quote="MartinDBaker" data-source="post: 49785" data-attributes="member: 9186"><p>Hi,</p><p></p><p>I went on a 14 day Med cruise last year and took the D7000 and just my 18-200 VR Mk1. Missed having 2.8 to be honest, but at least it was light weight. On the tours I found we were wisked around too quick, they gave us no time at all to listen to the guide then take photos properly. I set Auto-ISO on to save time, the tours took us through highly variable lighting conditions.</p><p></p><p>The Mk1 suffers bad from lens creep & annoyed me. I've subsequently bought a "Lensband" - which has sorted the problem.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="MartinDBaker, post: 49785, member: 9186"] Hi, I went on a 14 day Med cruise last year and took the D7000 and just my 18-200 VR Mk1. Missed having 2.8 to be honest, but at least it was light weight. On the tours I found we were wisked around too quick, they gave us no time at all to listen to the guide then take photos properly. I set Auto-ISO on to save time, the tours took us through highly variable lighting conditions. The Mk1 suffers bad from lens creep & annoyed me. I've subsequently bought a "Lensband" - which has sorted the problem. [/QUOTE]
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What to take on a cruise
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