Search This Blog

Showing posts with label Bag. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Bag. Show all posts

Monday, May 11, 2020

Does your bag unzip on its own? Clip it

    My camera bag is a bit like a clown car.

    There's a camera body, a couple lenses, neutral-density and polarizing filters, flash light, audio recorders, mic, batteries, charger, cables, notebook and other things. Once, while going through a security checkpoint at Downtown Disney in Anaheim, Calif., the guard found a mechanical pencil in there I thought I had lost.

    This does present a problem. The one compartment will tend to unzip itself due to the weight. And it's not just a problem with my Manfrotto bag. Joe Edelman, who does TogChat Live on Youtube, pointed out that a bag he got had the zipper positioned in a way that the weight of the bag would cause it to open catastrophically.

    (Please don't tell me to just carry less gear. Would you honestly tell Tiger Woods he only needs two golf clubs?)

    I've put the zippers to one side, but that can be a bit of a hassle. So, after another incident where things came tumbling out of my bag, I came up with an idea to put some kind of clip through the handles of the zipper to keep it closed. My first experiment was with a paper clip, which worked well, but I decided I could do better.

    I took one of those small carabiner clips you get at dollar stores for holding car keys or other things (I use one to attach a water bottle to the outside of my bag when I travel). I threaded it through the holes in the zipper handles, and it works. Plus, it also creates a deterrent to anyone who might try to pickpocket the bag.

The carabiner's a bit of a tight fit, but it doesn't let the bag zip open, and it deters potential thieves.

Monday, April 20, 2020

Secure lenses, caps in camera bag with Velcro-style fasteners

    A couple years ago I got a Manfrotto Active Backpack 1 to replace my LowePro Mini Trekker.

    One of the things I like with the Manfrotto bag is that the camera and its lenses are in a compartment I can access while keeping a strap on my shoulder. I had to take the LowePro off every time I needed to get inside it.

    But I've noticed that when I've opened the camera compartment, some of my lenses were slipping. I almost lost a nifty-50 that way. I needed to find a way to secure the lenses better.

    The solution was at the local dollar store.

    Inside the camera compartment, it uses hook-and-loop fasteners (the generic form of Velcro fasteners) to secure the compartment dividers. I decided to take advantage of that to secure my gear.

    I bought a 10-piece set of 1-inch square hook-and-loop fasteners (generic Velcro fasteners) at the dollar store (the one I went to was Dollar Tree, but the names vary depending on where you live but the concept is the same; everything is a buck).

    I cut a hook piece in half, so it was .5 by 1 inches, and used the adhesive backing to apply it to the middle of my lens cap. It worked, in the sense that the piece on the lens cap caught hold of the inside of the bag, but it came right off.

    I solved that by using hot glue to attach it to the cap. I would recommend using one of the genuine hot-glue guns and not the "cold" guns, as the hot ones have a stronger adhesive. And it worked, keeping my lens secure.

    I've since applied it to all my lenses, and found it can even secure the camera body when the lens is attached.



    As a side benefit, the fasteners can also be used for holding on to the caps. You can either stick it inside the bag, put a piece of loop material on your camera strap or put some on one of those lens-cap tethers. If you do the latter, I would recommend attaching the tether to the strap lugs on your body instead of the lens, since it likely will get in the way on the lens.