I skip 99% of the gear gabbing you’ll find on other photography sites, primarily because I’m more interested in the creative side but also because so many other sites already do it really well. I make the occasional exception, like when a new toy falls into my hands before anyone else, or when I feel some industry hype building around an imminent release that needs to be tempered with some realistic expectations.
I did this popular review of my entire kit and how to pack it for travel…um…but that was 6 YEARS AGO. So as you might imagine, a lot has changed. Between that older video post and the number of times I get asked to highlight my fav gear — I figured it was high time for an update in one single vid. Therefore, I present you dear friends & readers a complete breakdown of my essential “working” photo kit AND the kit that we use to make all our behind-the-scenes videos, plus a few extras. Hope you dig – questions / comments encouraged. I’ll be all over it like white on rice.
In this video, I broke my kit into four sections: Still photo gear, [behind-the-scenes] video gear, data management gear and gear extras. For both the still kit and the video kit, I always roll with two of each body (Nikon D4 and Canon 5D Mark III) and 8 additional batteries for each. This basically gives me enough juice to last a week.
On the data management side, you’ll notice we also double up on our drives, both for the road kit and back at HQ. [Side note: if you’re traveling with two drives on the road, keep them separate — separate vehicles, separate hotel rooms, etc. That way if one crashes and burns, you’ve got back up.]
For gear extras, we have a few supports to choose from (always carbon fiber), some choice audio gear and a real sexy slider from Rhino Camera Gear that’s affordable and quite portable.
REMINDER and to be extra clear…in both photo & video scenarios what we’ve shared is the BASE kit – the kit that goes everywhere without exception. This is gear I think is worth investing in if you are a working pro. It’s NOT my complete gear list and it’s not the complete solution for every gig –we almost always add speciality pieces for particular assignments– but I thought we’d get too deep into the woods and it woulda made a video that was an hour long if we reviewed all that non-essential, non-“core” stuff. So we kept it focused as we could. Here it is. The camera kit I have with me on 99% of the commercial shoots I do:
Nikon D4 – My go-to for stills since it first made its appearance in early 2012.
Nikon 14-24mm f/2.8G ED-IF AF-S Zoom Nikkor Lens
Nikon 24-70mm f/2.8G ED-IF AF-S Nikkor Lens
Nikon 70-200mm f/2.8G AF-S VR II Nikkor ED-IF Lens
Nikon 85mm f/1.8G AF-S FX Nikkor Lens
Nikon SB-910 TTL AF Shoe Mount Speedlight Flash
Canon EF 16-35mm f/2.8L II USM Ultra Wide Angle Zoom Lens
Canon EF 24-105mm f/4L IS USM AutoFocus Wide Angle Telephoto Zoom Lens
Canon EF 70-200mm f/4L IS USM Autofocus Telephoto Zoom Lens
Canon EF 35mm f/1.4L USM AutoFocus Wide Angle Lens
Promise Technology Pegasus J2 512GB SSD Thunderbolt Storage Solution, Up to 750 MBps Read Speed
Promise Technology Pegasus J4 2.5″ 2TB Thunderbolt Hard / Solid State Drive Enclosure
Zacuto Z-Finder EVF Pro 3.2″ High Resolution Monitor
Tiffen 77mm Variable Neutral Density ND Filter
Manfrotto MVH500AH Professional Fluid Video System, Carbon Legs
Manfrotto Kit with 190CXPRO4 Carbon Fiber Tripod and MH054MO-Q2 Head
Manfrotto 057 4-Section Carbon Fiber Tripod with Rapid Column
Rode Stereo VideoMic Pro On-Camera Microphone
Zoom H4n Handy Mobile 4-Track Recorder
Sennheiser EW122PG3A Wireless Kit
So that’s it. If you look through my BTS posts and videos, there’s a damn good chance you will see some combo of this gear in use. Time-tested; Jarvis-approved.
Special thanks to Adorama for helping me assemble my kit.










Really enjoyed the gear video update!
You mentioned how important it is to keep your data backups separately. I’m curious why you don’t also do that with your gear. That is, you take two sets of camera bodies and other items but store the main and backup gear in the same case.
Is it just a matter of space? And I suppose not confusing things by mixing your still and video gear?
Thanks for sharing all the different aspects of your work and creative passion!
yes – you nailed it.
sep data is primarily to prevent corruption, not theft, although it satisfies both.
gear is usually pretty ubiquitous in most urban centers – ie you can get buy rent anything in case of emergency.
if we go super remote, we treat gear just like data – mission critical for success of job.
data is always sacred 😉
Very nice set-up, simple, useful and practical…
That is no doubt a gear overkill.
it all depends on what dragons you are slaying, my friend.
Hey Chase, been following you for a while! Thank you for great insight and inspiration!
I was wondering why no 2.8 lenses on Canon list and have you been considering any online backup (like CrashPlan/Backblaze or custom backup on Amazon Glacier)?
Should be more precise: why use eg. 70-200 f/4 instead of f/2.8 II?
Rewatched video: questions on gear answered. Sigh.. coffee makes difference 😉
yeah – if making more broad choices for lenses (as in have to do more work than just shoot bts vids – we would def be going 2.8 all the way. just found that bts vids are so run and gun for us. any “pro” video or film work (ie not bts, gets primes and 2.8 for sure)
Oh, how interesting. Many changes!
And what about software? All the same job with the Apple Aperture?
we use aperture, lightroom, photoshop – that’s about it.
for the first 2 – depends on client pref. photoshop is pretty ubiquitous