Chase Jarvis Chase Jarvis
  • Photos
  • Projects
  • About
  • Blog
  • Book
Chase Jarvis Chase Jarvis
  • Photos
  • Projects
  • About
  • Blog
  • Book

The Best Camera — The Everyday, Can Do No Wrong Camera Kit

One of the most common questions we hear from all of you is, “What is your everyday kit?” Our digital cinema guru, Erik, wanted to take a minute to chat gear with you and answer that question from his perspective. Please give him another warm welcome… This post is another installment of a series that our staff is doing about the gear that we consider essential for our work…the stuff we don’t leave home without. -Chase

Thanks Chase. As I sit here on my couch writing this blog post, I’m surrounded by no less than 22 cameras in my living room alone.  Some are decorations, some are used on occasion, some are only used for video shoots, and one gets used every. damn. day. I’m a collector [read: junkie] and I can’t get enough cameras, so when one becomes a regular fixture of my daily creative arsenal, it’s worth taking a moment to recognize its greatness.  Right now that camera is the Olympus OMD E-M5.  I picked mine up last may, and have since taken it around the world and shot the hell out of it.  My kit consists of the E-M5 camera body, an Olympus 14-150mm f/4-5.6 lens and a Panasonic 20mm f/1.7 lens, all wrapped up in a Think Tank Retrospective 30 shoulder bag. It’s a simple setup, but it’s yielded results good enough for me to keep bringing it out of the house while my bigass DSLR kit stays on the shelf.

There’s a lot to love about the E-M5.  It’s weather sealed, it’s got a slick retro design, and the image stabilization is like nothing I’ve ever seen before.  But for me, the camera really shines in two categories: speed, and low light capability.  Everything about this camera is fast, from the startup time to the autofocus to the frames per second it can fire.  Even the layout of the buttons and dials make for a brisk shooting pace.  In regards to low light, the image quality holds up quite nicely at high ISO’s.  I don’t like to use a flash, so this is a huge bonus for me.  ISO 3200 on the E-M5 looks like ISO 1000 on my Canon 7D, it’s crazy, and everything shot at ISO 1000 or lower looks the same, so grain and noise are rarely a concern.  Throw the cameras insane 5 axis image stabilization into the mix [which allows for shooting at slower shutter speeds] and you can shoot in the dark with results like this [click to enlarge]:

This picture was shot at ISO 3200, f/1.7 at 1/13th of a second. If you can't do the photo math on that, trust me, it was dark.

Now let’s talk lenses.  Keeping my kit lightweight is important to me, so I’ve paired it down to just two lenses; the 14-150mm zoom, and the 20mm pancake lens.  The zoom lens keeps me covered for just about everything I want to shoot as long as there’s enough light.  With the 2x crop factor on the E-M5’s sensor, it’s effective focal length is 28-300mm.  That’s some range.  Check out these shots from our recent trip to Villefranche for an example.  They’re shot from the same spot using the same lens zoomed all the way out on the left, and all the way in on the right.

The only drawback to this lens is that its aperture is a little “slow”. The widest aperture on the lens is f/4, and f/5.6 when zoomed to 150mm.  While that’s fine and good for bright landscapes, it doesn’t lend itself well for indoor or night photography.  This is when I switch to the Panasonic 20mm f/1.7 pancake lens.  This was the first lens I picked up when I started using a micro four thirds camera 2 years ago [the Panasonic GF1], and it might be my favorite lens of all time.  It’s super sharp, it’s tiny, and it can see in the dark [as shown in the above photo of Mike Horn holding the giant wine bottle].  Its focal length is a sweet spot in my opinion.  At 20mm, or 40mm equivalent with the crop factor, you can take a few steps closer to your subject and take a portrait with no weird lens distortion, or take a few steps back and get a wide shot with no lens compression.  Here’s a portrait of Norton looking like a baller on Fancy Friday, shot with the 20mm:

And here’s a landscape from the Guardian Peak Winery in Stellenbosch South Africa, also shot with the 20mm:

The final component of this camera kit that I think is worth mentioning is the oh-so-classy Think Tank Retrospective 30 shoulder bag.  Think Tank nailed the design of this bag with one simple characteristic that ALL other camera bag manufacturers need to take note of; it doesn’t look like a camera bag.  There are no bigass logos anywhere to found, no hideous bright green interior, no giant awkward straps for securing tripods or trekking poles or whatever else you wanna weigh yourself down with.  This bag looks like something your cool grandpa handed down to you after he retired from chasing his secretary around.  The bag is smart too.  I love the deployable “Sound Silencers” that cover up the velcro so you’re not the noisy photographer swapping gear in and out of their bag.  The Retrospective 30 is my preference since it holds my camera body, lenses, batteries, and the occasional iPad with room to spare, but they make them in a wide variety of shapes and sizes, so check out their website to see if they have what’s right for you.

I hope you found something useful from this minimalist approach to photography.  If you’d like to try any of this photo gear out, it’s all available to rent from BorrowLenses.com.  Feel free to tell us about your walkaround kit in the comments section and, as always, keep snapping.

 

Related Posts

10 Things Every Creative Person (That’s YOU) Must Learn
051026_ChaseJarvis_einstein_writing_vlrgwidec
Writing Makes Photographers More Creative — 5 Easy Tips
Daniel Pink: The Power of Regret
Chris Hutchins of Chase Jarvis LIVE
Chris Hutchins: All the Hacks to Maximize Your Life
Chris Burkard on Chase Jarvis LIVE
The Wayward Path of Photographer Chris Burkard
Make Your Message Heard with Victoria Wellman

88 replies on:
The Best Camera — The Everyday, Can Do No Wrong Camera Kit

Comments navigation

Previous
Next
  1. indeedbook.com says:
    November 24, 2014 at 4:58 pm

    Uninterested in the identical outdated porn videos that includes bleach blonde pornstars
    with massive pretend tits? Go to Tube 8 now for
    an unbelievable choice of free sex videos in every XXX area of interest conceivable!

    In the event you’re on the lookout for horny novice teen girls that love to fuck our sextube won’t disappoint.
    What about mature milf pornstars that love deep anal penetrations and sloppy blowjobs?
    We’ve got kinky fetish porn filled with bondage, fisting & extra that
    may go away little to your erotic creativeness. If interracial freeporn is
    your thing don’t miss wild Indian, Latina, Asian, Ebony & other babes from around the world.
    We even have an HD part!

  2. Adalberto says:
    November 24, 2014 at 2:15 pm

    Vor allem Guides Kosmetikprodukten und den neusten Modetrends.

  3. Lorrie says:
    November 24, 2014 at 2:59 am

    Sending and receiving photos works exactly the same way, but Yovo
    has one extra trick up their sleeve.

  4. alquiler furgoneta madrid por horas says:
    November 23, 2014 at 9:17 pm

    No lo man, en alquiler furgonetas EXPERCAR encontrará
    el vehículo que se adapte a sus necesidades y sobre todo, también a bolsillo.

  5. www.scoop.it says:
    November 20, 2014 at 3:50 am

    The initial one is the damaging power of old water. It can spoil surfaces surfaces
    and rugs. Occasionally it can actually eliminate the primary structure of the
    building. The 2nd motive is the fact that water supplies are tight in numerous areas of the entire
    world, that it’d genuinely be described as a shame
    by not correcting any damage to the piping technique as
    soon as possible to waste this natural resource that is important.

Comments navigation

Previous
Next

Comments are closed.

BUY NEVER PLAY IT SAFE NOW!

Get weekly, curated access to the best of everything I do.

Popular Posts

20250916_CJLIVE_HowMuchIsEnough_Micro_Thumb_16x9_v2.5The Most Important Question You’re Probably Not Asking: How Much Is Enough?
20250826_CJLIVE_DontTradeDreams_Micro_Thumb_16x9_v2.5Don’t Trade Your Dreams for Security
a close-up of a bearded man with short, graying hair wearing a light blue button-up shirt. The text beside him reads "Mastering the 3 Types of Conversation" in bold white and yellow letters. In the top right corner, the show’s logo, "The Chase Jarvis Live Show," is displayed in yellow and black. The background is black, making the text and the individual stand out prominently.The #1 Mistake That Ruins Most Conversations
A smiling man in a blue shirt, positioned against a black background with bold white text on the right that reads "STOP WASTING TIME." In the upper right corner, a yellow box contains the logo "The Chase Jarvis LIVE Show." The image has a bright yellow border.The Dark Side of Productivity Myths Exposed
Héctor García and Francesc Miralles smiling, with bold text in the center reading '4 Steps to Discover Your True Purpose' on a black background. Framed with a yellow border, creating a high-contrast, engaging design.Why You’re Not Finding Your Purpose
A portrait of Israa Nasir, a psychotherapist, set against a black background with bold white text that reads, "Why Rest Feels Like Failure," framed by a yellow border and a small "The Chase Jarvis Live Show" logo in the top-right corner.Toxic Productivity Is Killing Your Success
20241030_CJLIVE_BrianSolis_Blog_16x97 Ways AI is Transforming Creativity
20241219_CJLIVE_AaronLeventhal_Thumb_16x9_v2.5Beyond Midlife: How Can ‘The New Fit’ Guide Your Health Journey?
20250204_CJLIVE_AmieMcNee_Thumb_16x9_v2.5Stop Waiting for Permission to Create—Here’s How to Start
20250320_CJLIVE_JennyWood_Thumb_16x9_v2.5What’s Stopping You From Taking the Risk That Could Change Everything?

Daily Creative Projects

© 2024 Chase Jarvis. All rights reserved.