...
What did I get for my money?
Manufacturer: Lowepro www.lowepro.com
Case, called a pouch, which describes it very nicely has a ref D-Res 8S (Digital Resolution Series)
Internal dimensions 100x65x40mm
External material: water resistant nylon crossweave, mostly black, the zipped top ... Read review
Advantages: Fits the camera perfectly Disadvantages: Boringly efficient
...money?
Manufacturer: Lowepro www.lowepro.com
Case, called a pouch, which describes it very nicely has a ref D-Res 8S (Digital Resolution Series)
Internal dimensions 100x65x40mm
External material: water resistant nylon crossweave, mostly black, the zipped top in silver grey with the obligatory manufacturers logo.
Internal material is a soft, lightly padded brushed nylon in grey. One full length internal pocket. ...I can thoroughly recommend the Lowepro camera pouch and based on this experience, Lowepro products in general. Its very well made, light weight and a lot of thought has gone into the design. The camera itself is well protected and the belt attachment is very secure. And for £10 it’s a bargain. Pentax could do worse than include a Lowepro as a standard accessory – I’m sure Lowepro would happily re-brand them to Pentax for the right size of order. ... more
Time was when a camera equipment bag was enormous and included extra lenses, extra rolls of film, a tripod, a flash gun with lots of spare batteries and of course the camera itself which was, most likely, an SLR of significant proportions and weight. I think they were called gadget bags.
Time was when a camera price included a sturdy case!
How things have changed! My new digital camera, a Pentax Optio 430RS has a built in, powered, telephoto lens, built in flash, a very thin but long life rechargeable battery (50x35x6mm), and the one piece digital film (42x36x3mm) can hold several hundred photographs depending on the mega or giga bytes. All within very small dimensions – 90x60x35mm - about the size of a credit card and a wee bit thicker! Now admittedly in the case of certain of the accessories the SLR add-ons are of significantly better specification but still, how the manufacturers of gadget bags must have suffered!
But that’s progress. Or is it? My £300 digital camera had a major omission – it didn’t come with a case of its own, not even a relatively cheap nylon version to protect it from scuffs. This omission is not peculiar to Pentax and is mentioned in many camera reviews. It does have a wrist strap supplied.WOW. But the good news for you all - this gave me the opportunity to hunt for one to my own specification and to write about it for Ciao!
This specification was fairly simple – having bought a small camera (remember, credit card size in width and height and 35mm deep) its case had to be of similar compact dimensions, with space for a spare battery and spare piece of digital film. The case needed to be kept under control and not wander too easily so a belt connection and optional shoulder strap were all added to the spec. For price comparison purposes I could buy a Pentax leather case for £28 but as they hadn’t included one with the camera I wasn’t inclined to let them extract more money from me.
My first point of call with many small items I need, is an ebay auction. Auction is often the wrong word – many items are simply made available immediately at a fixed price. I was hoping for some ideas – maybe a phone case would suffice, maybe an MP3 player case. My wildest dreams were exceeded (maybe that’s going a bit far) and I came up with a branded camera case for under £10, but the dimensions didn’t fit too well. Off now to the manufacturers web site – isn’t the internet wonderful? - and found out that they had a wide range of camera bags with a series especially for digital cameras! A bit of searching for the right dimensions, a quick email to the company from e-bay, a quick response pointing me to one I’d missed on an auction (I wouldn’t admit this to everyone but the camera dimensions of 90 x60mm can also be 60mmx90mm!!), a ‘buy it now’ transaction and in two days I had my camera case – all in price including p&p, £10.
What did I get for my money?
Manufacturer: Lowepro www.lowepro.com Case, called a pouch, which describes it very nicely has a ref D-Res 8S (Digital Resolution Series) Internal dimensions 100x65x40mm External material: water resistant nylon crossweave, mostly black, the zipped top in silver grey with the obligatory manufacturers logo. Internal material is a soft, lightly padded brushed nylon in grey. One full length internal pocket. Attachments: Two loops on top for the shoulder strap provided A wide belt loop, sewn in at the top and one velcro attachment at the bottom, forming the loop and another velcro connector underneath the pouch for safety. Like a safety clasp on a necklace. The pouch is sewn together in sections and keeps its own shape very well.
The camera is a snug fit vertically in the pouch, with a spare battery in the pocket and a spare digital film sitting in the base of the pouch. The sturdy zip closes easily, but also produces a little bit of compression to the pouch, so that nothing can move around. In practice I found the belt loop very easy to use. It can be attached without unhooking the belt and with the double Velcro its impossible to pull the pouch off the belt. Access to the camera is easy, unzip the top and the camera slides out with a little help, but the other bits stay in position. I usually keep the wrist strap on the camera for a that bit of security when its out of the bag. I haven’t actually tried the shoulder strap – the belt loop is so convenient.
I’m sure you won’t be surprised to learn that I can thoroughly recommend the Lowepro camera pouch and based on this experience, Lowepro products in general. Its very well made, light weight and a lot of thought has gone into the design. The camera itself is well protected and the belt attachment is very secure. And for £10 it’s a bargain. Pentax could do worse than include a Lowepro as a standard accessory – I’m sure Lowepro would happily re-brand them to Pentax for the right size of order. But then manufacturers rarely do anything that seems logical to us punters!
confusion 28.10.2003 (09.12.2003)
Ciao members have rated this review on average:
very helpful
Review of Lowepro D-Res 8S Soft case Digital photo camera
Advantages: Very high quality costruction and features. Disadvantages: Quality comes at a price, sometimes.
I have been using one of the Lowe-Pro Magnum bags for about 3 years, for my 35mm outfit, and I can't fault it for construction or capacity.
There is a larger bag, the 'commercial' but I don't think many people would need this large a bag, unless they carried LARGE lenses on a regular basis.
I can fit my 2 Canon EOS 5 bodies in (one fitted with 70-200mm f2.8 lens, and a pro flash, plus up to 2 extra lenses plus other gadgets and stuff. I always ... ...bags (they must be using thin lenses), as the lenses I use are quite 'fat' being f2.8 zooms. The latest version of this bag has removeable end pockets (mine doesn't) to allow you the choice of adding other 'sliplock' accessories, such as lens pouches, film pouches etc in place of the pockets. I find that the integral pockets on my bag fit lots of odds and ends just fine. There's a big flap pocket on the outside of the bag, with organiser compartments ...
Nige7Whit 13.10.2002
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Ciao members have rated this review on average: helpful Review of Lowepro D-Res 8S Soft case Digital photo camera
Advantages: Soft and protective Disadvantages: Not fully waterproof
What can i say, an excellent little baggy to keep your wonderfully shiney new all singing all dancing digital camera protected from pretty much anything.
The case externally is about 12cm tall by 9.5 wide and 5.5 deep, at the widest points. My camera is about 9 tall by 5.5 deep by 2.7 thick and fits nicely. there's almost room to squeze my mobile in the case with it, which may not be idea but there's certainly room for some extra memory cards, there's ... ...the case for at least a year and even putting the camera through bagadge handling etc at airports hasnt caused any problems for my camera.
The only slight downside is that i dont think its fully waterproof, certainly fine to have it out in some rain for an hour or whatever but i wouldnt like to drop it in a puddle.
It comes with a shoulder strap, and a velcro attachment to put it on a belt or bag strap
little on the pricey side but i guess thats ...
owen080808 12.04.2007
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Ciao members have rated this review on average: helpful Review of Lowepro D-Res 8S Soft case Digital photo camera
Product Information for "Lowepro D-Res 8S Soft case Digital photo camera" »
Carrying case
Type
Soft case
Recommended Use
Digital photo camera
Carrying Strap
Belt loop, shoulder carrying strap
Additional Compartments
Memory card
Features
Zippered
Manufacturer's product description
The D-Res 8S is a sleek, new, streamlined, super-compact pouch for tiniest digital point-and-shoot cameras.PPODUCT FEATURES:Soft, brushed tricot lining;Special inner pocket for memory;Attachment tab that fastens to your belt or any SlipLock base product;Includes removable shoulder strap.This camera case is compatible with the following digital cameras:Canon ELPH S100/110;Canon IXUS v/S110;Canon Powershot S-200;Canon Powershot S-330;Casio ELIXLIM EX-M1/S1;Casio QV-R3/R4;Fuji FinePix F401;Konica Revio KD-300/310/400z;Kyocera Finecam S3/S4;Minolta Dimage X;Panasonic DMC-F7;Pentax Optio 330/430RS.
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