Thursday, August 17, 2006

Exhaustive Equipment List

**Please see post below for Basic Equipment List

You may find the following helpful in terms of giving you details for photographic equipment you could need/ want.

This is adapted from recommendations from the School of Photography run in Kona, Hawaii.
Initially written by Dennis Fahringer.

Extra equipment.

• an external flash with bounce and swivel.

I’d recommend the Canon 550EX flash.

• a circular polarizer

Get one large enough to fit the filter thread of your ‘fattest” lens. You
can get step-down rings to fit it to smaller diameter filter threads on
other lenses. I’d recommend Hoya brand. Other good brands are B+W and
Tiffen. It needs to say “circular”, not just be a round filter.

• rechargeable batteries and charger

including a spare battery pack for your camera (which probably comes with
your D-SLR). For AA batteries for your flash, NiMH batteries are best. Get
a charger for less than 2 hr. charging, such as Maha/Powerex. For NiMH
batteries and chargers, I’d recommend you check this Web site

http://www.thomasdistributing.com/mhc401fs.htm

• a way to carry your camera gear,

A means to carry and protect your equipment, such as a sturdy camera bag in
canvas or Cordura in a light-reflective color such as gray or tan, if
possible. Alternatively, you can use a hip pack, which puts the weight on
your hips, photographer's vest (which you may find too hot to use in
Hawaii's heat), or a photographic backpack.

I prefer Domke brand (the F2 model) but Lowepro, Crumpler, Tenba, etc. are
other choices.

Though not required, I would personally strongly suggest your having a
sturdy tripod to use which is tall enough to go to your eye level when
you’re standing without using its center column.

I prefer one with a removable ball-head to one with a pan/tilt head. I’ve
found over the years that many of my students have had blurred photos of
flowers and other close-up subjects, landscapes, night shots and others
which could have been much sharper had they used a tripod.


Ways you could save some money, with perhaps some loss in quality:

• older model Canon, Nikon or Fuji D-SLRs, sold used, perhaps from eBay
online.

• lenses not made by Canon or Nikon (such as Sigma, Tokina, and others to
fit Canon or Nikon bodies)

• battery packs not made by the maker of your camera

• it’s possible that Sigma or Sunpak may make a flash with the exposure
compensation that makes the 550EX preferable to the Canon 420EX.

• other brands of digital cards than Lexar.


Ideal, but not required ;-)

• Lenshoods for your lenses, ideally plastic, metal, or rubber, (in order
of preference).

• Screw-in skylight filters to protect each lens of a quality brand.

• your own Apple laptop, running OS 10.3 or newer (Panther), with SuperDrive
(internal DVD burner/player/CD burner/player), 1 GB of RAM (or more), 14" or
15" screen. (Our College is nearly all Mac users, rather than PC users.
I can only help with tech support for Macs.)

• Adobe Photoshop CS software

• Having an extension cord for using your flash 3 ft. (1 m.) away from your
camera is also valuable to have.


Getting what you need:

The Lord can provide the equipment you need in many ways. You may be able to
find someone willing to lend you the equipment you will need for this
course. You may prefer to buy (brand-new or used). Someone may give you the
equipment you need. (Don't rule this out: God has done this for others!)

We buy most of our photo equipment and supplies from a mail-order photo
store in New York City, B+H Photo/Video. (New York is a city which offers
some of the lowest camera prices in the world.) UofN-Kona is on an island
without a major camera store.

Contact Information for B+H Photo-Video:

Online:

Web site: http://bhphotovideo.com

E-mail to Order: photo@bhphotovideo.com (to order)
E-mail to Check the Status Order: ord-status@bhphotovideo.com
E-mail About Used Camera Gear: used@bhphotovideo.com

B+H Photo/Video
420 9th Ave
New York City NY 10001
USA

From within the U.S.:

Telephone orders: 1-(800)-947-9954, speed dial 633 for 35mm equipment

Fax for orders: 1-(800)-947-7008

Customer service (telephone): 1-(800)-221-5743 or (212)-239-7765

Customer service (fax): 1--(800)-947-2215 or (212)-239-7549

They are among the most well-stocked, lowest-priced, quickest-shipping
mail-order photo dealers I know of in the U.S. I would recommend ordering
with a credit card.

If you order with a credit card with a billing address and bank outside the
U.S., you’ll need to fax them the front and back of your card and expect a
bit of delay with getting your order sorted out with them, because its a
foreign credit card.

One other place to buy just your camera at a low price is:

HELEN JENSEN
NATIONAL GRAPHICS SUPPLY
226 N.ALLEN ST ALBANY, NY 12206-1799
USA

Wk: (800) 223-7130 ext. 3182
Other tel.: (518) 438-8411
Fx: (800) 832-2205 (or 518-438-0940)
email: reply@ngscorp.com

This is a company recommended and used by Patrick Murphy-Racey, one of our
guest teachers. They supply cameras to many newspapers in the U.S. Don't
expect Helen to be able to answer a lot of technical questions or give photo
advice, please.

Please try to make sure that your equipment is in good working condition
before coming to the school. If your camera or other equipment needs repairs
once you’re here, it will probably take a month or more to get fixed, as we
don’t have camera repair folks on this island.

2 comments:

Lo said...

i just applied to the photogenxdts. thanks for the equipment list: its very helpful. i was wondering what the mac discount looks like and if there is an available discount for photoshop as well.

Anonymous said...

the discount for the laptop is 200 bucks off and the CS3 suite is 500 total. It helps for sure.

posted from current Kona staff person