What gear to bring for London?

Hey guys, so I'm heading to London in a week and I'm struggling with what cameras and lenses to bring as it's supposed to be a 5 day chill trip with my girlfriend not a photography one, however I'm also meeting a friend who is a professional athlete that I met through Instagram who wanted to meet for a drink/go on a photo mission so I'm sort of torn between keeping a light set up and bringing enough gear to get an amazing picture for her as it would really help my career.

Right now my light weight set up is my 1DX and my 35mm 1.4 II witch can cover low light, a one lens set up, speed with the 12fps if she wants to do something with sports for our photo shoot.

The bring enough gear set up is two 1DX camera's a 24-70 2,8 ii 70-200 2.8 ii is and the 35mm 1.4 ii but I know bringing that is stupid however like I said I'm worried the light weight setup won't be enough.


It's a stupid question I know but as I'm just getting started with my career I'm scared of messing up this opportunity that I feel could give me a good jump start so any advice/help would be really appreciated thank you!
 
What sort of photo do you want of the athlete? If straight portraits why not the 24-70 and maybe the 35mm for low light work (not that low light will be a problem with the 1Dx)? You can always crop the 24-70 to 90mm equivalent.
If, however, you are after action shots then the 70-200 would be helpful but it depends what sort of shot you think you need to boost your profile.
If you take one body and all 3 lenses and the 70-200 stays in your hotel room, does it really matter?


I'm still getting my mind around the 1Dx being 'lightweight gear....'
 
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I'll be there myself in a couple of weeks and plan to bring the 24-70, 70-200 F4, and a 1.4 extender. I'm also going to bring my spare 5D III body as a backup but have pulled off the battery grip for weight and size. The 24-70 will probably live on the camera but I want the option to push out nearly to 300mm.
 
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Depends what you are looking for! Here is something at 24mm (using my 24-70 f2.8):

2Y2A4029-HDR.jpg by Richard Anderson, on Flickr

Also 24mm on the same lens:

Homeward bound by Richard Anderson, on Flickr

A few miles outside London in St Albans (but similar idea of street bound work) using a 135mm:

Catch a dream by Richard Anderson, on Flickr

In fact, it is hard to find the last time I used anything other than my 24-70 in London:

2Y2A1208.jpg by Richard Anderson, on Flickr

Enjoy the City. It is a great place with lots of photographic opportunity whatever the weather!

Best

Richard
 
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Cheekysascha said:
The bring enough gear set up is two 1DX camera's a 24-70 2,8 ii 70-200 2.8 ii is and the 35mm 1.4 ii but I know bringing that is stupid however like I said I'm worried the light weight setup won't be enough.

Just bring one 1DX and add a 16-35 F4 L IS and I think that would make a very nice lightweight setup! My lightweight setup is either a 1DX or 7D2 + 100-400 Mk2, 1.4 Mk3 extender, 24-70 F2.8 Mk2 and a 16-35 F4 L IS - covers most things.
I don't do much photography in cities but, when I do, I find the 16-35 range very useful - might be worth renting one?
 
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If you are going to be doing much site seeing, I'd also bring a 16-35 f4 IS or similar. Lots of architecture and elaborate interiors to photograph. The type of athlete and places you'll be would better determine what lenses are most appropriate??
 
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The person who suggested bringing an umbrella (or buying a cheap one when you arrive) isn't kidding...
But seriously: As MikeHit says, think about whether you (and the athlete) want a portrait or an action shot, and that will govern your equipment. Because most of the trip is supposed to be a vacation, I lean to the 5D as the camera (weighs less -- and there's nothing that ruins a vacation more than a camera that breaks). True, it's only 6 fps, but you're shooting a setup, not an event
 
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The best would be a 1DX with the 24-70, 70-200 and a good low light portrait lens. The 35 although good isn't your your best bet as a portrait lens. An 85, 50 or 100/135 would be perfect. Typically when going after this type of possible gig 1 cam will do and cut down on the weight. The 1DX is a great camera but if weight is a concern I'd take a 5D. The only time I use the 1DX for this type of work is hardcore fast action sports and often a 5D3 will work in a pinch.

Lately I can get away with either a 1DX or 5D3 and 3 lenses... a 16-35 f/4, 24-70, and a 70-200. Often it's a 16-35, 85 1.2 and a 24-70 unless the 70-200 is an absolute necessity. Dropping that 70-200 is a huge weight savings. If weight is a major concern and reach also an issue, a 135 and and extender instead of the 70-200.
 
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YuengLinger said:
Umbrella.

From Wikipedia so take it with a pinch of salt:

Climate. London has a temperate oceanic climate (Köppen: Cfb ), similar to all of southern Britain. Despite its reputation as being a rainy city, London receives less precipitation (601 mm (24 in) in a year), than Rome, Bordeaux, Toulouse, Naples and even Sydney.
 
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3kramd5 said:
johnf3f said:
My lightweight setup is either a 1DX or 7D2 + 100-400 Mk2, 1.4 Mk3 extender, 24-70 F2.8 Mk2 and a 16-35 F4 L IS - covers most things.

Wow! What's your heavy setup? Arri Alexa and a set of full sized cineprimes? :p

Not quite - but as you asked this what I often take for wildlife:
Lowepro Supertrekker AW2, Gitzo 3530LS, Wimberley 2, Canon 1DX, spare battery, Canon 800 F5.6 L IS, Canon 300 F2.8 L IS, 1.4 + 2 x extenders, odds and ends like blower/lens cloth etc, CPL filter, 1 liter flask of Tea (most important!) - that's about 50lbs if I leave the 7D2 at home. There is usually a folding chair, 2 sheets of scrim netting and 4 bamboo poles. Sometimes the poles and scrim netting don't go and I take a 2 man popup hide.
Note I DO NOT do hills with this lot! Also I used to be 6ft 7 tall but am now 5ft 9 ;D
 
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Mikehit said:
johnf3f said:
1 liter flask of Tea ...Sometimes the poles and scrim netting don't go and I take a 2 man popup hide.

Just what you need for some discrete street photography ;D

Quite right! They will never spot a green camo hide in the middle of a city! The 800mm is a bit limiting though - unless they are in a different street ;D
 
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I realize this is a photography forum, but I expected more entrepreneurial answers from the pro togs that work for themselves. . .

The important point hers is that this is a BUSINESS opportunity and should be treated as such. Bring ALL your gear you might need for absolutely anything that might come up. Pay the extra money to get it on the plane (think of it as an investment) and bring all of it with you to the meeting (probably not on you, but hopefully in the car or something along those lines). Take care of your business the day of the meeting and keep the gear stowed away for the rest of the trip, you know, the part that is NOT business! Grab a point and shoot and go have fun with your GF. PnS or iPhone pix will do for memories. . .

pierre (the serial entrepreneur)
 
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bluemoon said:
I realize this is a photography forum, but I expected more entrepreneurial answers from the pro togs that work for themselves. . .

The important point hers is that this is a BUSINESS opportunity and should be treated as such. Bring ALL your gear you might need for absolutely anything that might come up. Pay the extra money to get it on the plane (think of it as an investment) and bring all of it with you to the meeting (probably not on you, but hopefully in the car or something along those lines). Take care of your business the day of the meeting and keep the gear stowed away for the rest of the trip, you know, the part that is NOT business! Grab a point and shoot and go have fun with your GF. PnS or iPhone pix will do for memories. . .

pierre (the serial entrepreneur)

Ah I obviously got it wrong! Suggesting that they bring their L (Mk2) glass and a 1 series camera + add an excellent wide L zoom is amateurish? Where have I been going wrong all these years/
 
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johnf3f said:
YuengLinger said:
Umbrella.

From Wikipedia so take it with a pinch of salt:

Climate. London has a temperate oceanic climate (Köppen: Cfb ), similar to all of southern Britain. Despite its reputation as being a rainy city, London receives less precipitation (601 mm (24 in) in a year), than Rome, Bordeaux, Toulouse, Naples and even Sydney.

It's not mm of rain that counts.. it's number of days when SOME rain falls.

Having said that, London is on the dry side of the country, and is often quite windy.

Point is, weather forcasts are only accurate to about 24 hours, out to 72 hours weather type is often accurate but timing can be wonky. Weather will tend to be stuck in a "type" for a few days.

Wind:
North = cold, dry in the southern half of the country.
East = whatever the continent is getting, in winter that sometimes means snow.
South = warm, often dryer.
West (prevailing) = mild and frequent bands of rain... expect some rain at some point most days.

If we get a high pressure stuck over us THEN we get a spell of nice weather.. it can last two weeks or so, but often doesn't.

The general rule is be prepared for anything, and check the weather forecast EVERY morning if you're going out.

example: we had a guy over from Texas who was dumbfounded by "scattered showers".. i.e. a spell of heavy rain, then a spot of glorious sunshine, then another downpoor, then more sun, all that was before lunch.
 
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Went to London last August.

Bring the rain gear, a light slicker will work instead of an umbrella.

I wouldn't drive in London, when mass transit is so good and riding the tube gets you anywhere in town faster than you could drive. Because of that you didn't describe a "light" set up. If your on foot packing all that gear all day it will not be fun. Most likely most would stay in the hotel.

For shooting your athlete buddy shooting portraits in London is the same as shooting portraits any where else. The question would be are you trying to tie in some of London in to the shot. For my style London leans toward the wide range of shooting, but everyone is different. There is old buildings, church's, castles. bridges and more.
Street life abounds. Plan accordingly.

I brought my 70=200mm II and used it once on the trip. After a week in London we toured the country side and at Stonehenge I did one shoot with the 70-200mm, it never came in to play in London.

I would take it all, then during the day probably go out with the 24-70 II and the 35mm in my pocket. I love the magic that lens can create wide open.
 
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What are all these negative comments about London's weather? It gets about 1/3 the rainfall that I am used to and about double the sunlight!
London has wonderful weather - trust me I live in Wales! :)
 
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