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Going to Russia- What to bring?


albertwang

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Okay, I'm planning a trip to Russia, Moscow and the outskirts. Very interested in figuring out whether I should be a minimalist (1 body, 1 lens) or maximalist (2 bodies, 5 lenses). Also any tips on shooting pictures and making the most of it? :rolleyes:

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The M with 35 and 90 is fantastic and enough!

 

Best regards, Thomas.

 

P.S. Werchoturje in the near of Jekaterinburg. M6 with Summicron 35.

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I'd take a "holy trinity"; 35, 50, 90. In an ideal world the 35 would be a 1.4, the 50 an Elmar 2.8 and the 90 the 2.8. An alternative would be the exceptional Voigtlander 40mm and the Leica 75mm f2 if you wanted to go for a really compact two lens combo. If you are going to go 2 lens, I'd also think about the Lens Carrier M.

 

Regards,

 

Bill

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If you shot on film take two bodies:

 

One with ISO 50 or ISO 100 and the other with ISO 400 film.

 

So you can take pictures in- and outside always without flash.

 

My Equipment for 4 weeks Cuba in January 2006 were 2 M6TTL, CV15/4,5, 28/2asph., 35/2asph., 90/2,8 + SF20, Leica Mini-Tripod and Gossen Multisix

all packed in the wonderful Billingham for Leica M with two side-pockets.

 

Not to heavy to walk 6 hours a day at 30° C!

 

Regards Stefan

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If my walk around bag weights more than about 2Kg of cameras ( before a bottle of water and other essentials ) I find that after a couple of hours, the ache in my shoulder reminds me that I have brought too much gear.

 

So I limit myself to at most 2 bodies - one with a wide 21mm and the other with a normal 50mm lens. At night I swap the 21mm for a fast 35mm.

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I don't know what kind of gear you have, but were I to go to Moscow again, I'd take an M & a couple of M lenses, plus a DSLR with one lens.

 

Use film for the magic shots & DSLR for mucking around!

 

BTW I was in Moscow twice in late 1991 - a very sobering time (after the Coup and at the end of the USSR). If you're interested I've got a few photos online at:

 

http://4020.net/eastbloc/#cccp

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In summer, take one body and the Tri-Elmar with a fast prime lens of your choice for available light indoors. It is easier to look after a small kit than one big bag!

 

David

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Guest menze_as

My recommendings:

one body and the Ilford XP2 which can be exposured from 100 to 800 ISO while the film stays in the camera (b/w in C41 process). Tri-elmar is good, then one lens for available light in the evening and a 21 or 24. If you have a smaller automatic camera, like minilux or CM, take it with you too (autofocus, quick shot).

 

Greetings, Astrid

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Repeat this mantra three times: "Less is more, less is really more."

 

Along with a body, I would take a fast standard lens (either a 35mm or 50mm) and, possibly, a 90mm lens if you actually use one of these (for me, it may just stay in the hotel room). Although I'm a strong believer in what we call here where I live Murphy's law (bad things happen only when you're not prepared for them) I don't believe I would be tempted to bring any backup equipment. If I did it would only another body and standard, and this stuff would definately stay in the hotel room.

 

I would definately be toward the one body one lens end of your spectrum.

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Albert -

 

Look at your passport and be certain you have at least a year left on it. Although six months usually is the cutoff, the Russian immigration/customs can be bureaucratic.

 

George (The Old Fud)

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Albert,

 

anything between 28 and 90 should work fine...

 

Wolfram

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and another one.

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Agree with William!

 

That 28/2ASPH is looking very enticing.

 

My wife will shoot me, though, if I even talk about one out loud!

 

:o

 

Thomas' picture is fabulous: it looks like an itching on Meissen with its delicate colors and detail. Wolfram's shots are also exceptional, both of them. I guess these are the advantages of having both Forums so closely located, we finally can fully enjoy the work of our German colleagues.

 

Thanks.

 

Allan

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