Billingham Hadley and Eventer Shoulder Bag Review

Billingham Hadley and Eventer Shoulder Bag Review

20 PHOTOS|
NEW YORK, NY|
REVIEWS


The way I use my Billingham bags.

Before I start talking about my experience and the quality of my Billingham bags I want to Note: This is totally my own personal experience, what I found that works the best for me and my style handling my gear in all conditions moving around day to day in and out of crowed areas wet and dry, this is only for information purposes base on my opinion(s) hopefully it will help you to choose your next bag. I’m in no way getting paid to support or to talk on behalf of Billingham products or any of the products I review below, it is just my own honest personal experience on the product(s) and what I find works for me.Click here to add your own text
I have talked about my Billingham photo bag around the time of a photo competition that was very cool on its own and allot of fun along the way, however this time I’m here to tell you about the bag itself and how it served me and protects my gear in every way imaginable that I use daily. It’s so good that I even got the Billingham Eventer which is my prize bag.


This is My Eventer Pro Bag

Images of the Billingham Hadley in a downpour.

Before I have used the Billingham, I have used National geographic, Lowpro, Tarmac, Domke and Thinktank, those bags are all great bags in their own way however it’s really up to you on what you are looking for, do you travel? go on long stays or short ones? do you walk around most of the day or the evenings? do you do street photo’s or landscape ones? how much protection you expect to get or want for your gear and this depends on size comfort and style. That is where the variation of bags come into play, but once you know what you are looking for everything else becomes easy, it’s just a matter of choice.

I for one got tired of the rumor photo guy look and how most portray photography, this is still totally up to the individual, but I decided to take on a different style and look as I move around in discretion.
I don’t like giving away that I am carrying anything containing taking pictures or have anything to do with photography, because it is much of a fresh air when there are no suspect with other people pointing you out as a photographer and here is where the Billingham shines further than any bag I have used.
Some images of how the Billingham stands up to the elements this one was extreme from a storm, and yes, the storm blocker does work! better than I expected no more worries about rainy days 🙂

 

01
Soaked in a downpour. (#)
© Ashton .W / Ashtonesia dot com

 

02
Soaked sitting. (#)
© Ashton .W / Ashtonesia dot com

 

03
Path of small flood. (#)
© Ashton .W / Ashtonesia dot com

 

04
After a good soak. (#)
© Ashton .W / Ashtonesia dot com

 

05
A look inside. (#)
© Ashton .W / Ashtonesia dot com

 

06
Billingham Eventer side front view. (#)
© Ashton .W / Ashtonesia dot com

 

07
All is dry from the elements. (#)
© Ashton .W / Ashtonesia dot com

 

08
Sporting in the rain. (#)
© Ashton .W / Ashtonesia dot com


This is My Eventer Pro Bag

My Eventer Pro Bag, still looks crispy to this day, I use it only for special occasions, the leather rim edges are a great plus to this bag. These come is some colors, Black and Tan, Red and Chocolate, the Navy Blue and Chocolate MkII is the 2022 color. The Eventer that I got is a classic it’s not the 2022 version. It also holds just enough for what I carry but it feels like its build more for camera bodies like the Leica and today in 2022 with the Canon R5, R6, and R7, this bag will get tons more years of use, it can hold an iPad or any tablet 10″ to 11″ I’m sure mine will hold the lates iPad Pro of 2022 as well.

01
Eventer Brass pins. (#)
© Ashton .W / Ashtonesia dot com

 

02
Eventer Buckles and thick stitching. (#)
© Ashton .W / Ashtonesia dot com

 

03
Eventer Front view. (#)
© Ashton .W / Ashtonesia dot com

 

04
Eventer Laying on its backside. (#)
© Ashton .W / Ashtonesia dot com


The National Geo Bag

Walking around in Manhattan for long periods of time for more than 5 miles when I’m on the road I do it all by foot. I have had pains in my shoulders and back from back packs such as the National Geographic NG-5737*, NG-5738 or National Geographic NG-5162* which is one of my favorite bags both medium and large, the large I still have up to today and have no intentions of getting rid of it, the padding’s on this bag is not so great especially if you have it fully loaded, with 4 big lens, 1 body, small laptop and your batteries and power cords.
Even when the buckle is strapped around you, this can hurt as you go through the day walking up and down and taking on hills, like I said the padding is not great it actually gets flat like compressed close to no padding at all, if this bag had padding like the Tamrac I would still use it on a daily basis but nope this is not the case, the padding gets flatten after a few runs with it about one month since I always take all my gear with me and at the time I also had a cheap tripod attached to it, the tripod itself was a Davis & Sanford alloy not carbon fiber like what I use today. The bag quality is strong and will not rip from loads, the raincoat is nice and will keep the elements out but it’s something you have to take out of the bag to put on, but as time gone on, I changed bags to find more comfort and versatility.

The Only Natgeo Bags I still have is the Large one.

01
The only pictures I took when I had the Tamrac with my medium and large Natgeo Bag that I still have, these bags are only used for travel with large gear. (#)
© Ashton .W / Ashtonesia dot com

Tamrac Expedition 8x was much better on the shoulders fully loaded with almost everything including a full size tripod, my shoulders was still able to go along however until some long walks I began to feel the pain seep in, also the fabric of the bag will not protect in a down pour, the rain coat is a little complicated also you have to buy it separately which was a hit since the bag is already expensive as is why didn’t the rain coat come with this bag? well we all know why.

01
Backside of bag. (#)
© Ashton .W / Ashtonesia dot com

 

02
Front of bag. (#)
© Ashton .W / Ashtonesia dot com

 

03
Rain cover that I modded, normally the rain cover can’t come out of the sleeve. (#)
© Ashton .W / Ashtonesia dot com

 

04
Back of bag you can see that this bag is padded very well. (#)
© Ashton .W / Ashtonesia dot com

Tamrac 8x Bag

The Tamrac bag images are here as well, just a view on what it looked like at the time when I happen to sell it, one thing I can say about Tamrac accessories is that they are made to attach to the back which is very handy and great I like them and even use some of them without this bag today, I no longer own this bag anymore.
The spacing is a plus it will hold anything you throw at it, and I can tell you for the average or even pro user this bag can handle anything you throw at it. It is very strong and have quality with loads of padding, I never experience anything ripping or breaking with it, only the rain part I really didn’t like and I testing the compartments with white book paper to see where the water got in. Use the raincoat in wet conditions, you will be happy you did.

Lowpro

I used and it was great and very comfy but I never fully loaded it, I only used it as a light kit bag with one lens, it was very nice and the rain coat was built in, but I did notice with all these bags is that there fabric just isn’t for a downpour on its own, and I was getting tired of having to walk around with that extra piece (it may be just a rain coat but if you forget it at home or loose it that can be problematic for when you actually need it to protect and especially if bad weather hits you off guard) all the time so I began looking for bags that was straight out water resistant.

Domke F-8 is made in the USA and is strong all the way to the finish line, yes it will last you a life time as well, it is waterproof and comes with its own wax to protect give the bag the life time finish and protection it needs to keep looking great, it’s strong for what I had in it, but please do not that this bag is for very small kits it will hold a full frame body with one lens, spare battery and a charger on both sides and for the inside top pocket it can hold your filters or anything other charging cords you may have or business cards, it was a great buy at the time at J&R when they were around, one of the best places in history to buy bags, I’m happy to be a part of that history to have items today that still works from them.
I never kept the bag for very long as it was way too small for what I really was looking for but for people that like to walk around with one body and a lens that wants a peace of mind this is for you, the inside protection is great as well, not all bags are designed the same this is where the Domke stands out, there are many other sizes of Domke just like there are Billingham bags, the choice is yours.

Sean John Bag is not a camera bag but there are sleeves out there that you can use to make it one, I bin using this bag for over one year and it served me well, it don’t show any signs of camera gear or photographer at all, it is very discrete and nice, I kept it very clean and in excellent shape all the time, it held my full frame body 70-200, 50mm and 17-40mm with batteries and some accessories such at lens pen and filters. I thought this would of lasted me for a life time, the bag is not water resistant at all and I know that but the convenience of having it where it were at my side beats it, the zipper was a bit hectic to get to the gear I’d say, (but this is only after using the Billingham Hadley) but it got the job done, I never exercise getting my gear wet in any form at all and with this bag I never took chances to put my gear in danger.

 

SeanJohn Bag

Until one day I was going for a shoot for the day to get some nice images and bag the handle broke in two, I was a bit sad that happen since i was so use to it and have bin with it for so long that is when I find the time has come for the Billingham Hadley since they both were similar in design.

I have been looking for the images and here they are, some of the images I took at the time the Seanjohn Bag got busted, I had the Billingham shoulder pad long before I had the Billingham Hadley because I know one day it would come to have that bag. It was a crazy day in and on the run needing to have a bag to put my gear in. It wasn’t hard to know what bag I was switching to, as you can see how it’s very similar aside from the Billingham style, it is a beautiful bag, but it just isn’t design with high quality to be used to hold huge weight of camera gear for a long time, if the handles were stronger maybe you could.

The materials is like a canvas net plastic like, it can be cleaned easy with a tooth brush to get the dirt out the hard to reach areas, also latter on I notice that I could of still kept it, put another handle to the bag in a different way, I had this bag for many years, it just laying around, that’s when I decided to give it a try as a camera bag it was great for the time it lasted.

 

 

 

01
SeanJohn Bag ripped. (#)
© Ashton .W / Ashtonesia dot com

 

02
Busted handle from the side of bag. (#)
© Ashton .W / Ashtonesia dot com

 

03
Standing with the Billingham shoulder pad. (#)
© Ashton .W / Ashtonesia dot com

 

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