Well, David Douglas Duncan seems to have shot the entire Korean War
using just 2 lenses, a 50mm and a 135mm, and the same exposure for all
his pictures. W E Smith, on the other hand, used 5 cameras at a time.

Patrick Chauvel shot the glorious invasion of Panama with a yellow
Minolta Weathermatic. He tricked his way onto the island by pretending
to be a tourist. During the invasion he was shot in the stomach. He
wrote (in "Shooting Under Fire"): I had that yellow Minolta
Weathermatic around my neck, the only one I had left after being
robbed earlier. I looked like an idiot with a hole in my stomach and
this dumb camera. I thought the Americans wouldn't pick me up when
they saw it. "I'm press", I'd say. "Bullshit", they'd say. "No way.
You're a tourist". It would have been terrible to die with that
camera.

So you see, you have to be able to improvise!

--
Cheers,
 Bob 

> -----Original Message-----
> From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] On 
> Behalf Of Shel Belinkoff
> Sent: 05 September 2006 23:34
> To: Pentax-Discuss Mail List
> Subject: RE: the way it was ... the way it is (was: amusing 
> product review)
> 
> Oh, you'll get no disagreement from me on that point.  OTOH, 
> based on the
> equipment list posted by some GFM attendees, and the gear 
> I've seen various
> PDMLers take for a few hours of local shooting on one of our NorCal
> meetings, there is definitely a point of overkill.
> Capa shot an entire war with less gear than some people bring 
> on a days
> outing.  Erwitt's travelling equipment case of 35mm gear - 
> the one he took
> when on assignment - contained less gear than some people take for a
> weekend stroll in the woods. I think you have the same photo 
> I do of that
> case.
> 
> But, the real point is that, for me and some others - 
> yourself included -
> carryig lap tops, CD burners, poratble hydroelectric 
> generators, satellite
> uplinks, and so on and on are not only wasteful of space but 
> often useless
> in many situations.
> 
> And, considering the prevelance of zoom lenses these days, 
> you can often
> get by with only two or three lenses.
> 
> What some of the people here are missing is the point that 
> many photogs
> when travelling, are travelling to places where it's 
> difficult to recharge
> batteries, where lap tops are useless without portable generators,
and
> where it may be difficult to find an internet cafe that allow 
> you to burn
> CD's.
> 
> Shel
> "The smallest feline is a masterpiece"  - Leonardo da Vinci
> 
> 
> 
> > [Original Message]
> > From: Bob W 
> 
> > One of the important things is to try and eliminate 
> show-stoppers and,
> > as far as reasonable, single points of failure. It's 
> therefore wise to
> > have at least 2 bodies and a set of lenses with some 
> overlap in their
> > range of focal lengths. 
> 
> 
> 
> -- 
> PDML Pentax-Discuss Mail List
> [email protected]
> http://pdml.net/mailman/listinfo/pdml_pdml.net
> 
> 
> 



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