Linda Marshall – Retiring enabled me to fulfil my photographic passion

I am an amateur photographer currently living in Herefordshire.  My father gave me my first camera when I was a teenager – an Agfa Rapid – and my interest in photography developed from that gift.

Since retiring a tad early in 2014, I have been able to focus on my photography full time.  I love sport and was delighted to be given the chance to photograph the Worcester Wolves  matches, having taken many school trips to the club.  Here’s a monochrome image taken at the Worcester University Arena this season:

Linda Marshall 01

I also love to photograph big birds [eg  Bewick’s swans at Slimbridge, red kites at Gigrin].

Linda Marshall 02

When I can get to the coast  I also like to photograph  action:

Linda Marshall 03

I am working on a  monochrome series of coastal imagery   – here’s one currently in the set  which will be  printed on matt paper:

Linda Marshall 04

With the help of Beacon Camera Club members, you tube and trial and error, I have been developing the skills to create more abstract imagery:

Linda Marshall 05

My grand day out!    The BBL Cup Finals  Arena Birmingham  –  January 29th 2018

Linda Marshall 06

I have a left shoulder injury and an obvious lens choice  [70-200mm f2.8ii ] had to stay at home as the shoulder wouldn’t tolerate hefting it about all day. Taking both the Speed Freak and the Airport International  enabled me to take more gear than I could physically carry – rucksacks are out of the question at the moment.  When I arrived at the arena, photographers were very restricted and I had to  experiment with the primes from the corner of the court selected from the roller bag [ which was secured secured to a chair with the built in metal cable – a great feature]. Deciding that I couldn’t get the shots I wanted from the corner of the court,   I managed to create enough space next to the basket to move in a chair next to the lad whose job it was to wipe up the sweat from the court when the players clattered to the ground. This enabled me to support the camera with my left elbow resting on the bag on my knees.   At half time, at the other end of the court, I had to sit on the floor. My bag helped a great deal again – supporting my shoulder.  At the end of the 3rd quarter, I stood up to stretch my legs out [much muttering amongst fellow photographers about sore knees],  took  a couple of steps  away from my position to lose my spot within seconds to a guy who just nipped in and sat down!   Lesson learnt….    Thanks to Tom Bennett of Razorlight Imagery for the mug shot of me  holding his camera, taken shortly after I lost my spot on the floor.

ThinkTank Airport International V2

The gear in the two Think Tank  bags I took to Arena Birmingham for the BBL cup final on January 28th was as follows:

  • Canon 24-70 II f2.8
  • Canon 300mm f4
  • Canon 135mm f2.8
  • Canon 200mm f2.8
  • Canon  16-35m II f4
  • Canon 35mm f1.4
  • Olympus OMD EM1 Mk2
  • Olympus 12-40 f2.8 PRO
  • Olympus 7-14mm f.28 PRO
  • Think Tank Card pouch – more spare cards
  • Fuji X100T

Linda Marshall GEAR FIT 1

Linda Marshall GEAR FIT 2

ThinkTank Speed Freak:

  • Canon 15mm f2.8
  • Canon 1DX2
  • Think Tank Card pouch – spare cards
  • Blower brush
  • Systema waterbottle
  • 2 spare 1 DX batteries
  • 2 spare Olympus batteries

I have two waist bags: The Speed Freak and the Speed Racer.  I am most comfortable with the Speak  Freak for my basketball photography.

At a home match, I can take move around easily with all the lenses I need without having to be concerned about the security of my kit. The belt is broad enough to be comfortable and the external pockets give plenty of space for cards, my phone and money and a snack.  In the lid, there is an easy place to stash lens wipes, a spare card and business cards; I now avoid putting anything metal here as an allen key escaped once and  lightly scratched the back of my camera.   The Airport International also takes a shedload of gear; I believe the latest version has a more robust handle but I am not prone to dragging my bags up flights of stairs so it is not a drama for me.

It would be fair to say that I am a ThinkTank convert; I have 6 of their bags; all well made, hi spec material and created by sensible people who put handles where you need them!

Snapperstuff will be at the Photo Show again this year at the NEC; I always call in for a chat and usually come away with a bargain. J

You can find more of Linda’s work at the Beacon Camera Club website here:

Beacon Camera Club – Linda Marshall

If you’d like to see Linda in action she’ll be courtside for the Worcester Wolves at the Arena for their home games.

Beacon Camera Club in Malvern – are also running their annual showcase event at the Swan Theatre, featuring Joe Cornish, on 14 July. If you’d like to see and hear one of Britain’s greatest landscape photographers get your ticket here: BEACON CAMERA CLUB

Snapperstuff on stand 49 at the Canon Pro Photo Solutions Show 2010

Snapperstuff are exhibiting the latest from Think Tank Photo, Orbis

and The Gadget Scientist on STAND 49 at the Canon:

Canon Pro Photo Solutions 2010 show - 26 to 27 October

26 October 2010 – from 10 am to 7pm
27 October 2010 – from 10 am to 5pm
Business Design Centre, 52 Upper Street, Islington, London, N1 0QH


We’ll have the new Think Tank Photo Sling-O-Matics, Logistics Manager, Hydrophobia 300-600 v2, Retrospective and Multimedia ranges on show, as well as the Orbis ring flash.

Award winning photojournalist and multimedia expert Edmond Terakopian and Snapperstuff’s newest member of the team Angus Thomson, as well as founder Helen Atkinson will be on hand to answer all your questions on our gear.

We look forward to seeing you there!

Inside Think Tank Photo – Anthony Bolante – part 2

Part 2 of 3 – Reuters photographer Anthony Bolante demonstrates how he packs his equipment into the Think Tank Modular Belt System and Change Up belt pack for the Amgen Tour of California. Anthony uses the Modular Belt System on “Photo Moto” (shooting photos while riding on the back of a motorcycle) and switches to the Change Up belt pack as his “every day” working photo bag.

Inside Think Tank Photo – Anthony Bolante – part 1

Part 1 of 3 – Seattle based Reuters photographer, Anthony Bolante, talks about preparing to photograph the 2010 Tour of California bike race using Think Tank Photo’s camera belt system.

Inside Think Tank Photo – Multimedia range

Emmy® Award winning multimedia producer Dai Sugano and Pulitzer Prize winning photographer Deanne Fitzmaurice’s collaboration featuring Think Tank Photo’s new Multimedia DSLR bag system.