My first overseas trip with the D70s - what I learnt
Posted: Sat Jan 21, 2006 1:14 pm
Just got home from a 2-week trip to Malaysia/Singapore visiting relatives etc after an absence of 12 years. This was the D70s' first outing, after having barely a month to get used to its controls, and to SLRs in general.
The contents of my Lowepro MicroTrekker 200:
- D70s
- Kit 18-70
- 70-300G
- 50/1.8
- SB-800
Some of my discoveries:
- It is a real arse to keep changing lenses all the time. When you're standing in a busy street in Kuala Lumpur, or Penang, sometimes you might want to shoot the street scene, followed by a portrait of a stall-owner. Not the best time/place to fumble around for different lenses, lens caps, etc etc... which leads me to:
- Backpack camera bags tend to have a lousy design for quick access. If you have it on your back, you have to pretty much take it off your back and put it down somewhere to change lenses. Unless of course you go for the "here is my lovely assistant, with the camera bag on HER back" approach, which really only works until she gets sick of lugging YOUR camera crap around. So most of the time, the lens I used was....
- The 18-70 is a stunner for a kit lens. Probably 95% of my shots were with it. Looks like I take most shots between 18-35, with ocassional shots at 50-70 for longer portraits
- When I have time, the 50/1.8 is a great little lens. Sharp as hell for portraits. Thanks to the maximum f/1.8 aperture, I even got a couple of (I think) passable shots at the Singapore Night Safari.
- When I needed the extra reach, I got mostly decent results from the 70-300G. Unfortunately, that's provided you have plenty of lighting so you can shoot at an aperture of f/8, f/11 or so. I had a hell of a time at Batu Caves in KL. Due to the lousy lighting in the caves and the lens' max f/5.6 at 300mm, all I got was mostly dark, soft images. Worth packing for the size/weight/price advantage though.
- Curse you, affordable flash memory cards... I came back with 6.2GB of photos, about 1700 images in all. Still have to sort through them all.
- If you can help it, bring along a laptop with a cd or dvd burner, and keep burning backups of your images. I had a minor scare in Singapore when I thought my hard disk was starting to go down the gurgler, with 1000 of my holiday snaps. Turns out the noise was just the fan, which has since mysteriously fixed itself, so no harm done.. yet.
- If you have one, bring a compact digital too. There were times when it wasn't appropriate to bring a big DSLR camera, but I got some good shots with my Canon Ixus 400.
- Different lighting will screw with your mind as you try to set the white balance.
- Bracket exposures are a godsend when trying to coordinate lots of family group photos
- Always check your ISO settings if you remember to do it - I never seem to remember to set it BACK to 200 after stepping out of a dark area.
- Nothing beats the sound and feel of a real, physical shutter.
Some photos to come later
The contents of my Lowepro MicroTrekker 200:
- D70s
- Kit 18-70
- 70-300G
- 50/1.8
- SB-800
Some of my discoveries:
- It is a real arse to keep changing lenses all the time. When you're standing in a busy street in Kuala Lumpur, or Penang, sometimes you might want to shoot the street scene, followed by a portrait of a stall-owner. Not the best time/place to fumble around for different lenses, lens caps, etc etc... which leads me to:
- Backpack camera bags tend to have a lousy design for quick access. If you have it on your back, you have to pretty much take it off your back and put it down somewhere to change lenses. Unless of course you go for the "here is my lovely assistant, with the camera bag on HER back" approach, which really only works until she gets sick of lugging YOUR camera crap around. So most of the time, the lens I used was....
- The 18-70 is a stunner for a kit lens. Probably 95% of my shots were with it. Looks like I take most shots between 18-35, with ocassional shots at 50-70 for longer portraits
- When I have time, the 50/1.8 is a great little lens. Sharp as hell for portraits. Thanks to the maximum f/1.8 aperture, I even got a couple of (I think) passable shots at the Singapore Night Safari.
- When I needed the extra reach, I got mostly decent results from the 70-300G. Unfortunately, that's provided you have plenty of lighting so you can shoot at an aperture of f/8, f/11 or so. I had a hell of a time at Batu Caves in KL. Due to the lousy lighting in the caves and the lens' max f/5.6 at 300mm, all I got was mostly dark, soft images. Worth packing for the size/weight/price advantage though.
- Curse you, affordable flash memory cards... I came back with 6.2GB of photos, about 1700 images in all. Still have to sort through them all.
- If you can help it, bring along a laptop with a cd or dvd burner, and keep burning backups of your images. I had a minor scare in Singapore when I thought my hard disk was starting to go down the gurgler, with 1000 of my holiday snaps. Turns out the noise was just the fan, which has since mysteriously fixed itself, so no harm done.. yet.
- If you have one, bring a compact digital too. There were times when it wasn't appropriate to bring a big DSLR camera, but I got some good shots with my Canon Ixus 400.
- Different lighting will screw with your mind as you try to set the white balance.
- Bracket exposures are a godsend when trying to coordinate lots of family group photos
- Always check your ISO settings if you remember to do it - I never seem to remember to set it BACK to 200 after stepping out of a dark area.
- Nothing beats the sound and feel of a real, physical shutter.
Some photos to come later