Saturday, 14 February 2026

When You Really Need to Pack Light – What Camera Gear Do You Take?

 

When You Really Need to Pack Light – What Camera Gear Do You Take?

There are days when you can roll out the full kit: multiple bodies, heavy lenses, tripods, lighting, audio recorders…

And then there are days when you can’t.

Sailing on the Thames. Hiking. Travelling hand luggage only. Filming at an event where you must move quickly. Or simply when your back says, “Enough.”

So what do you take — and what do you leave behind?


1️⃣ The Ultra-Light Option – Smartphone

Weight: Almost nothing
Flexibility: Very high
Control: Limited (but improving)

Modern smartphones shoot 4K, stabilise beautifully, and edit on the device itself.

Perfect for:

  • Quick social posts

  • Behind-the-scenes clips

  • Spontaneous sailing footage

  • Fast turnarounds

But…

  • Limited dynamic range compared to larger sensors

  • Audio still needs help (add a tiny lav mic)

  • Fixed lens limits creativity

For pmrsailing-style daily updates? A phone can be absolutely enough.


2️⃣ The Compact Hybrid – Mirrorless Body + 1 Lens

A camera such as the Canon EOS R5 C (or similar hybrid body) paired with a single versatile lens — for example a 24–105mm.

Why one lens?
Because changing lenses:

  • Slows you down

  • Introduces dust

  • Makes you carry more

With one good zoom you can:

  • Shoot wide establishing shots

  • Capture portraits

  • Film mid-range action

Add:

That’s it.

This is often the sweet spot between quality and portability.


3️⃣ The “Serious but Sensible” Video Setup

If you’re filming something more structured — perhaps science demonstrations in your lab or a planned sailing shoot — you might bring a compact cinema body such as the Canon EOS C70.

But keep it disciplined:

  • Camera body

  • One zoom lens

  • Shotgun mic

  • 2 batteries

  • No extras

No sliders.
No second camera.
No five-lens collection.

The rule becomes:

If it doesn’t earn its place in the bag, it stays at home.


🎯 My Personal Packing Rule

For River Thames sailing days or family filming:

  • One main camera

  • One lens

  • One microphone

  • One support (mini tripod or monopod)

And that’s all.

The electric Whaly is already carrying safety kit, lines, batteries and camera mounts — so weight matters. The lighter the kit, the more likely it gets used.

And unused kit produces exactly zero content.


💡 A Helpful Mindset Shift

The question isn’t:

“What might I possibly need?”

It’s:

“What will I realistically use?”

The lighter the setup:

  • The faster you react

  • The less tired you become

  • The more natural your footage feels

Sometimes constraints improve creativity.



Friday, 13 February 2026

Filming and Editing Just With a Phone Most people do it… but is it really the best choice?


 

Filming and Editing Just With a Phone

Most people do it… but is it really the best choice?

In 2026, almost everyone has a 4K video camera in their pocket. Whether you're filming a GCSE physics explanation, a sailing manoeuvre on the Thames, or a quick sustainability tip for social media, the phone is often the first tool we reach for.

But here’s the honest question:

Just because we can film and edit entirely on a phone… does that mean we should?


Why Phones Are So Popular

1️⃣ Convenience

The best camera is the one you have with you. Phones win every time here.
Spotted a perfect sailing moment? Quick experiment in the lab? Family reaction shot?
You’re already ready.

2️⃣ Integrated Workflow

Shoot → edit → upload → post
All on one device. No cables. No memory cards. No file transfers.

Apps like CapCut, Adobe Premiere Rush and LumaFusion make surprisingly polished edits possible.

3️⃣ Social Media Optimisation

Phones are designed for vertical video.
Platforms like TikTok, Instagram and YouTube (Shorts) reward speed and frequency over cinematic perfection.

If you're producing daily content — like many creators — speed matters.


But Here’s the Catch…

🎤 Audio Is Everything

Phone microphones are decent… but not professional.
In education especially (GCSE & A-Level), clarity matters more than resolution.

A £30 external mic can transform results — but now we’re no longer “just using a phone,” are we?


🎥 Control and Depth

Phones rely heavily on computational photography. That’s brilliant — until you need:

When filming science practicals, sailing footage on reflective water, or studio lessons, control matters.

That’s where hybrid cameras and cinema cameras (like the Canon EOS R5 C or Canon EOS C70) begin to justify themselves.


🧠 Editing Limits

Editing on a phone works — until projects become:

  • Multi-camera

  • Long-form (20+ minutes)

  • Graphics-heavy

  • Colour-grade dependent

Software like DaVinci Resolve simply offers more precision for serious production.

For quick reels? Phone is fine.
For structured educational content? Desktop still wins.


So… Is It the Best Choice?

It depends entirely on your goal:

GoalPhone Only?
Quick daily social posts✅ Absolutely
Behind-the-scenes clips✅ Yes
YouTube educational lessons⚠️ Maybe
Commercial-quality production❌ Probably not
Long-term brand building⚠️ Hybrid approach best

The Real Question

Is your aim:

  • To capture the moment?

  • Or to build something that lasts?

There’s no shame in using a phone. In fact, it’s brilliant technology.

But when quality becomes part of your brand — especially in education, sailing instruction, or professional media — your tools begin to matter.


My View

For spontaneous filming (like catching a perfect gust during a gybe on the Thames) — phones are unbeatable.

For structured lessons, controlled lighting, multi-camera studio work — dedicated kit still leads.

The smartest approach?
Use the phone when speed matters.
Use the camera when quality matters.

Not either/or — but strategic choice.

Thursday, 12 February 2026

In Search of That New Sound

 


In Search of That New Sound

There comes a point in music production where you realise you’re not short of notes…
You’re short of freshness.

As someone who blends science, sailing, video production and music under Philip M Russell Ltd, I’m always asking the same question:

How do you create a sound that feels new — but still musical?


🎛 Layering the Modern Digital Organ & Synth World

In my studio, instruments like the Wersi OAX 800 sit alongside synthesisers and DAWs. The beauty of modern digital systems is flexibility:

  • Layering pads under acoustic-style organ tones

  • Adding subtle rhythmic pulses for energy

  • Using side-chain compression to create movement

  • Combining sampled realism with synthetic textures

A new sound rarely comes from a single patch.
It comes from intentional combination.


🔬 Thinking Like a Scientist

Coming from a physics and chemistry teaching background, I often treat sound design like an experiment:

A sawtooth wave feels bright and aggressive.
A sine wave is pure and clean.
Add modulation and suddenly it breathes.

It’s not random creativity — it’s structured exploration.


🎬 Writing for Film & Education

When producing music for:

…the sound has to serve the message.

A biology video might need a gentle 6/8 pulse — almost like a heartbeat.
A sailing film needs space, wind, motion.
A physics demo might benefit from a slightly mechanical, rhythmic undertone.

The “new sound” isn’t just different — it’s purposeful.


🎧 Analogue Warmth vs Digital Precision

There’s always the debate:

The truth?
The future is probably hybrid.

Use technology as a tool — not a replacement for musicianship.


🚀 Where Does a New Sound Come From?

In my experience, it comes from:

  1. Cross-disciplinary thinking

  2. Borrowing ideas from science and engineering

  3. Listening widely

  4. Experimenting without pressure

  5. Accepting that 90% of experiments won’t make the final cut

But that 10%?
That’s gold.

Wednesday, 11 February 2026

Filming in the Rain – When the Weather Doesn’t Read the Call Sheet


Filming in the Rain – When the Weather Doesn’t Read the Call Sheet

There’s a romantic idea of filming outdoors: golden light, still air, obedient clouds.
Reality, especially in the UK, is drizzle… turning into proper rain… just as you press record.

Rain doesn’t mean filming stops. It just means filming changes.

🌧️ The Enemy Isn’t Rain – It’s Moisture Where You Don’t Want It

Cameras are tougher than we give them credit for, but water in the wrong place ends a shoot very quickly. A few basics make all the difference:

  • Rain covers – proper ones if you have them, plastic bags if you don’t

  • Lens hoods – not just for flare; they keep droplets off the front element

  • Microfibre cloths – plural, because the first one gets wet instantly

If the rain is light, you can often keep filming between showers and wipe down between takes. Heavy rain? Change your plan, not your pride.

🎙️ Audio Suffers Before Video

Video can look moody in the rain. Audio usually sounds dreadful.

  • Raindrops on jackets = percussion section you didn’t ask for

  • Wind + rain = microphone misery

  • On-camera mics are usually the first to give up

Lavalier mics under clothing, furry windshields, or even recording audio separately under shelter can save a project.

☁️ The Light Is Actually… Quite Nice

Overcast rain clouds act like a giant softbox. No harsh shadows, no squinting subjects, and very even exposure. It’s not dramatic sunshine – but it’s forgiving, especially for faces.

Rainy footage also works brilliantly for:

Sometimes the weather adds character you didn’t plan for.

🧠 The Real Skill: Knowing When to Stop

There’s a fine line between dedication and stupidity (most camera operators learn this the wet way).

If:

  • Water is getting inside connectors

  • Lenses are fogging internally

  • You’re rushing and making mistakes

…that’s your cue to stop, dry everything properly, and live to film another day.

🎬 Final Thought

Rain doesn’t ruin filming. Unprepared filming ruins filming.

With a bit of planning, a sense of humour, and a towel or two, wet-weather shoots can produce some of the most atmospheric footage you’ll ever capture.

Tuesday, 10 February 2026

An IR View of Winter

 

An IR View of Winter

Winter looks quiet.
Bare trees. Brown grass. Frosted mornings. A landscape apparently asleep.

But switch to infrared, and winter tells a very different story.

What infrared sees (that our eyes don’t)

Infrared photography doesn’t record colour as we see it. Instead, it records reflected near-infrared light, which vegetation reflects strongly when it’s alive and photosynthesising.

That means:

  • Healthy vegetation often appears bright white

  • Stressed or dead vegetation appears dark

  • Soil, water, buildings, and paths stay comparatively muted

So even in winter — when everything looks lifeless — IR reveals what’s still ticking away under the surface.

Grass: brown to blazing white

One of the biggest winter surprises is grass.

To the naked eye, winter grass often looks dull, muddy, and half-dead. In infrared, it frequently glows bright white — proof that:

  • Chlorophyll is still present

  • Photosynthesis is still happening

  • Growth hasn’t stopped, it’s just slowed

This is particularly striking on mild winter days when grass is dormant rather than dead.

Trees: not all “bare” is equal

Deciduous trees lose their leaves, but that doesn’t mean the story ends there.

In infrared:

  • Some trees show residual reflectivity in buds and fine twigs

  • Others appear completely dark, genuinely dormant

  • Evergreens stand out strongly, clearly alive and active

Two trees side by side that look identical in visible light can behave very differently in IR — a great reminder that appearances are misleading.

Frost and cold mornings

Frosty scenes are especially interesting:

  • Frost itself reflects IR differently from living tissue

  • Early morning shots can show sharp contrast between frozen ground and still-active vegetation

  • As the sun rises, IR reflectivity changes rapidly — winter scenes evolve fast

It’s one of the few times of year where revisiting the same spot an hour later can produce a dramatically different image.

Winter isn’t dead — it’s paused

Infrared photography gently challenges the idea that winter is lifeless. Instead, it shows:

  • Survival strategies

  • Energy conservation

  • Life waiting, not gone

Under the surface, plants are still functioning, just playing the long game until spring.

For teaching, photography, or simply seeing familiar places in a new way, infrared turns winter from a grey waiting room into a quiet, ongoing experiment in survival.