<|-- removed generator --> The Online Photographer: Camera-Carrying Hygiene

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Thursday, 14 August 2025

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Fascinating - I never knew all this stuff was a thing, I guess I need to re-examine my habits

Although I'm sure you never intended this as an exhaustive review of "camera hygiene," it will be interesting to see how others approach this topic. For example, street shooters may have entirely different ways of carrying and retaining their cameras than hikers, landscape photographers, or wedding photographers. I suspect the one unifying theme will be: anticipate risks and avoid distractions.

I may look ridiculous, but I love my Holdfast gear as I never have to put the camera down. But definitely it's easiest to keep things in place when it's habit, I've had several pat pat pat panic attacks looking for my camera on vacation.

Can't really beat oneself up about it- yes, it's those very 'habits' that keep us alive, safe and well. But being human, it only takes that one time; no matter how attentive or dedicated, no matter how practiced- there comes a time. A distraction or circumstance that interrupts the messaging, if only for the slightest instance- and the damage is done. The only solace, had you not been as attuned throughout, it would have happened even sooner...

I left my tripod on a beach one night after doing some late night long exposure photography. I walked away about a mile before remembering. I then spent a penitent hour staggering about on a beach in pitch darkness trying to guess where I had left the thing. Found it eventually. Bring a light!

I’m curious Mike – when you carry your camera over your shoulder is it lens in or lens out? I’ve carried mine lens in for decades. I think it actually can be deployed more quickly that way, is stealthier, and protects the lens. When I was working as a photojournalist I would generally have one camera with an 80-200mm around my neck and one with a 24-70mm over my right shoulder above my Domke bag. Worked very well for me for decades. I do still list a bit to the right though.

This brings back 2 horrible memories. Back in about 2000 I was assigned to a high school regional playoff basketball in a small town about an hour's drive away. I had a midnight deadline. The game was supposed to start at 7pm, but the previous game ran long, and my game didn't begin until nearly 8pm. I knew if I was able to leave by 10pm I'd have an hour to process, edit, scan negs, write captions and make the midnight deadline. My game also ran long. It ended at 10:15. I shot the celebration and sprinted for my car. About 10 miles down the road I realized that my camera was sitting on the passenger seat, but my bag, with another camera, lenses and flash, (about 10 grand in equipment) was not. I turned around and sped back to the high school. Would it even be open? Would the bag still be there? The community was known for a high crime rate. I pulled up to the gym entrance. The door was unlocked. I ran to the gym. Lights were off, but there was my camera bag where I left it. I grabbed it, ran to the car and sped off. I reached the office at 11:20pm, ran the film through the processor, etc, etc, etc. I missed deadline by 10 minutes, but one of the units on the press was down, so the production delay wasn't my fault.
In 2018, I was the last photog standing from a group of 9 full-time staff, + assorted temps and freelancers. It was a crazy time. One morning I loaded my car with gear, but set the working camera on the roof so I'd have it next to me. Yes, I forgot to grab the camera when I climbed in to drive to the day's 1st assignment. I never saw that camera and lens again.
In over 40 years of newspaper work, those were the only real eff-ups. Except for the time we went digital and the company only bought us 1 CF memory card for our Nikon D-1H. I left for an assignment, leaving my memory card in the Mac. I was supposed to photograph Rosa Parks! Stopped at a Walgreens and spent $30 for a 64mb CF card. Got some good pix. I was out the $30, but it was worth it. Sorry for the long post, but I just had to unload.

I've "lost" my camera bag only once. Had a job in Berlin and visited a friend the next day. We went out in the evening for a beer in the "party district". When we walked back home, I suddenly realised the bag was missing (F100, F90, trinity of 2.8 zooms, flashes). Raced raced the 100 yards or so to the bar and the bag was still sitting under the bench where I left it.

Since then, I religiously put my foot into the loop of the strap of the bag or backpack whenever I sit down for a meal (don't drink anymore either).

Earlier this year I tried an experiment. I took the strap off my Nikons and just use a good, purse-like camera bag. Easy to hold, and when done it's back in the bag. One weak spot is going to cafes, where I often loop the bag over my chair back. So far so good, but I know it's possible I might walk off without it someday.

I once was visiting New Orleans for the first time to visit a brother. Needless to say, New Orleans lent itself to many opportunities for photographs. We spent many hours walking the district with my Nikon DSLR on my shoulder. We paused at a bar for a beer and a game of pool. We left and had gone a block when I noticed the lack of weight on my right shoulder. PANIC!!! Went back to the bar and it was right where I left it on a chair by the pool table. I was amazed and its never happened again.

Yes, habits are necessary for not losing things that you use frequently. Things such as keys, wallet, eyeglasses, and phone should only be kept in one or two places. Fortunately I haven't lost any of those items but there were/are few moments of panic when I believe that I have. That happens when I put something down "just for a second" somewhere that isn't where I usually place it.

I’d like to add to this, if in an oblique way…
I was out bike riding with my camera in the late afternoon, hoping to catch one of those low, long shadow pre-sunsets under the clouds. Taking a dogleg route towards the west, with no traffic in sight, I saw what looked like one of those small coupon files people use while shopping, in the middle of the road, with some of the coupons wafting around it. Getting closer, I realized that it was a large woman’s wallet and the “coupons” were cash bills. I hurriedly scooped it all up before any traffic came by, and brought it back home. The wallet contained at least twenty or so credit cards and over a hundred in cash, plus I.d.’s, driver’s license and other items. Calling the person whose name was on the license, got them over to pick it up soon after. Turns out that the woman had placed the wallet on top of her car after a visit to a local golf range to put her clubs in the trunk, and subsequently forgot it was there, driving off into the sunset… I showed her my wallet, which contained one limited balance debit card and two or three other necessary ones, which I have copies of to remind me which ones I carry. She made a note of it, and was grateful to get hers all back.
Same thing with cameras and lenses. I photograph all the ones I have and record the serial numbers for various purposes. Haven’t put one on the top of my car yet…

A relative of mine out shopping with her sister and chatting away, returned to the car and packed away the shopping. Then still chatting, both got in and drove out of the car park and onto the street. Then looked over to the car park to see her toddler in push chair waiting next to the now empty car parking spot.
The same chattering pair on another excursion entered a 'new' clothing store and wanderered behind the counter to look at the stock hanging behind the counter. Proprieter asked them for their ticket as it was a dry clearners...
Distraction from routine can interrupt habit and destroy spatial awareness as you found...

The only time I was close to losing a camera was in Barcelona. I was shooting with my black Leica Minilux, not paying too much attention when suddenly my wife warns me about two guys about to jump on me. I turned around and they inmediately raised their hands and ran away. Now I live in a country where I can leave my camera or my phone or my bicycle anywhere and no one will touch them. It’s funny, when you go to the bike shop and you can find anything you want except for locks. It’s going to be hard to go back to civilization…

I wonder how come the Apple Airtags don’t have a function to alert you when you leave things behind or when you are separated by more then certain distance.

Never park ANYTHING on a car roof!

If you want to hang a camera or similar something off a chair back for a while, secure it by passing the strap through the chair back, then passing the camera through the strap loop, making a girth hitch. Illustration: https://www.101knots.com/girth-hitch.html

Bonus: this works even for chairs without "ears".

David Lee said:
>> I wonder how come the Apple Airtags don’t have a function to alert you when you leave things behind or when you are separated by more then certain distance.

They do.

As a dedicated practitioner of 1C 1L 1D. (The last is 1 day), I have never left a camera behind. Probably dumb luck. I use a standard issue, Kirk Tuck recommended, neck strap, around my neck. Seems to work.

Hi.

I'm a creature of habit. My 'losses' tend to occur when something (me or external forces) breaks my habits.

I too like the rope style strap used bandolier style. It's so easy to move the camera to where you want it, they are comfy, and can quickly be used as a wrist strap.

But, like bags and boots, there seems to be no perfect camera strap.

I've gone off the rope strap recently, as it is an accident waiting to happen (& a couple of times, an accident barely averted) when the camera is placed on a surface.

Currently experimenting with the Peak Design anchor clip system (being out of the camera shopping game for years, I had no idea such things existed), swapping between the Cuff wrist strap and a set of their anchors on my rope strap. Working out well so far.

Peace, and al that,
Dean

Three bloopers: Back in 1985 I was 19 and energetic. Half the last semester of the swedish correspondence to High School and all of that summer, I was working more than full time as a photographer for the local news paper, Norra Skåne. Long days well into the night at times. This one time I drove back home late in the evening, exhausted. I found a parking slot and decided to back my car in. But first I opened the driver´s door and put my full camera bag on the still warm street. I started to reverse into the slot, but something stopped the left front wheel. OK, more throttle, and the wheel bumped over and the car was nicely parked. I turned over to get the gear bag from the passenger seat. Then it hit me. NOOOOoooooooo! One Nikon F2, one FM2, four lenses and one flash were in that bag. I did not want to open it, but all the stuff was squeezed into one corner and the only thing broken was one UV-filter and the seams in that corner of the Domke bag. I decided to forget to tell my boss about that incident.

One year later I was on a short weekend trip in then West Germany, driving around taking pictures. Outside of Hamburg I decided to have a coffee at a large service station. For some odd reason i put my camera and four rolls of exposed film on the car roof. Between the sips my coffee was there as well. I threw the paper mug in the trash, took my camera and drove away. Those four rolls must have had the best pictures of my life, before and after the fact. I´m quite sure of that.

A few years later, in 1991, a friend and I were in Haarlem, the original, in The Netherlands. we had a coffee break in a small cafe at the outskirts of town and I put my camera under my chair. Halfway through our coffee, two young men came in and sat down at the table immediately behind me. They talked in arabic with a few words in dutch. My friend and I couldn´t understand exactly what they were saying, but it was clear they were talking about us. So we decided it was time to leave. After a few steps I heard the scraping sound of a chair from their table and soon I felt a hand on my shoulder. I froze and slowly turned around. One of the young men stood there with my camera in his hand. -I think you forgot something, he said, and handed it over. My shoulders went down and it all ended with me paying for their coffee. There´s lots of that stuff in this tale. And it´s good to have your prejudices challenged from time to time. But hold on to your gear!

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