📸 Capture Life's Moments in Style!
The Lowepro Slingshot Edge 250 AW is a compact and stylish sling bag designed for photographers on the move. It securely holds a DSLR with an attached lens, personal items, and even a DJI Mavic Pro drone. With a dedicated Cradle Fit™ pocket for tablets and a lightweight design, this bag is perfect for those who value both functionality and fashion.
Outer Material | Polyester |
Shell Type | Soft Shell |
Lining Description | Nylon |
Product Care Instructions | Hand Wash Only |
Material Type | Polyester |
Item Weight | 1.8 Pounds |
Unit Count | 1 count |
Item Dimensions D x W x H | 4.72"D x 8.27"W x 9.06"H |
Storage Volume | 15 Liters |
Apparel Closure Type | Zipper,Buckle |
Is Autographed | No |
Number Of Pockets | 1 |
Embellishment Feature | Buckle |
Compatible Device Size Maximum | 9.05 Inches |
Pocket Description | Utility Pocket |
Special Feature | Tablet Compartment |
Strap Type | Adjustable |
Theme | photography |
Style Name | Slingshot Edge 250 Aw |
Shape | rectangular prism |
Pattern | Solid |
Backpack Design | Laptop Backpack |
Subject Character | sports |
Color | Black |
R**M
Very nice compact design
I was looking for a new camera bag that would fit my basic, but expanding, DSLR set up. I have an old medium size Tenba messenger bag that is great and still holding up, but it's getting too tight to fit even the small stuff that I have in it. I have a Nikon D3200, 2 lenses with plans to buy a third soon, external flash, travel tripod, larger tripod, and other small accessories. I tried several other larger messenger style bags, but they just felt too bulky. And while I like camera backpacks for comfort, I don't like how you can't grab your camera for quick shots. I primarily wanted something for when I travel and daytrips in town, so a sling bag seemed to fit what I was looking for in comfort and quick access. I bought this and also the Case Logic DCB-308.After receiving both, I quickly decided to return the Case Logic sling bag because the difference in quality felt quite substantial. Considering I only paid about $15 more for the Lowepro Slingshot, it was a pretty easy decision. The only thing I liked more about the Case Logic sling bag was that it could hold more, and it was more customizable. The only drawback to the Slingshot is that you can't really configure it how you want. The velcro is placed in strips, instead of covering the whole back of the bag, so you can pretty much only configure it one way. Also, the space is quite tight. I can probably fit 3 lenses in the main compartment with an external flash, but it will be tight. On the other hand, this makes the bag very slim, and you can move around a crowd alot easier. The Case Logic bag felt bulky. I think this bag is perfect for day trips, travelling, touristing, and hiking. The rain cover is a huge plus, as is the water bottle holder. The tripod holder could also fit a larger 60 inch tripod I have, if I ever want to take it anywhere. The velcro tabs adjust by quite a bit. It would not fit in the Case logic bag.In terms of quality, the Slingshot blows the Case Logic away. Just feeling it, you can tell it's just a much nicer product. This feels like it should last at least 10 years if not longer, and is as good if not better than my old Tenba bag that has lasted about 7. The Case Logic feels like it would probably start breaking down in a couple of years, but it isn't a horrible bag. The Slingshot is definitely worth the extra money, even though you do give up some space.
G**Y
Excellent bag, but a bit smaller than expected
I own three other Lowepro cases for various travel situations, but I was attracted to the Slingshot Edge 250 for an upcoming trip to China where there are severe intra-country weight restrictions for carryon gear (11 lbs). I needed a case that would hold my camera, two lenses, my tablet, and some emergency toiletries and underware/socks. This case works but just barely.What is great about this case? Quality materials and workmanship. Terrific protective padding for expensive camera gear. Only six inches thick, so case is very slim to wear. The slingshot style (as opposed to a backpack with dual straps), is convenient and gets around some museum and public venue restrictions on backpacks. Fits under most airline seats.What am I able to stuff into the case? A Canon 80D with an attached 18-135mm lens with a lens hood in a reverse position, a 28mm prime lens with hood, Canon charger and battery, 2 spare SD cards, small wired microphone, a Samsung 9.7 inch tablet, a ziplock bag with minimal toiletries, 2 pair of underware and light weight socks, and car keys. Externally, case allows for a compact tripod and a bottle of water. That's it. Case is maxed out. There is no room for a third lens or external flash. Wireless microphone system? Forget it. Be aware that the 9.7 tablet just barely fits. I doubt a larger tablet would fit.If these space limits meet your needs, as they do mine, I can enthusiastically recommend this case. If you have a full frame camera you might find this case is too small due to the shallow depth. I've attached a picture of the camera compartment so you can see what it looks like with gear in it.
J**N
Really nice .. But
This is the nicest photo bag I have ever owned, but it is not the nicest photo bag out there. Prime Day helped me get this one because I'm a cheap bass who thinks more than $100 for a bag is ridiculous.The camera department in this bag is wonderful. I use a DSLR camera: Pentax K-3 iii, and three main lenses, a Pentax SMC 10-17mm fish-eye (my normal everyday lens on my camera most of the time), Rokinon 8mm fish-eye, and a Pentax D FA 28-105mm walk around street lens. I also have a battery grip that is normally on my camera, but this bag is too small / stiff to keep it on, an LED light, three camera batteries in a 3D printed holder, and an adjustable ND filter. This is all packed into the camera section and fits very snug, but very accessible. I wanted to have a little more room to keep my battery grip on my camera, but it isn't a game changer that it doesn't work (possible game changer / return below).The top section is wide open. I suggest using smaller travel bags in there because it is, wide open. I have one travel bag that holds the camera remotes, lens clothes, tool kit (folds up like a Swiss Army knife), pencil, sticky notes, and camera body cap. Then a pull closed bag that's got the battery charger mount, chord, wall charger, and a grey white balance card. Randomly tossed in there are my head lamps (I mainly hike at night here in Utah because HOT days), and a small LED flashlight (in the zipper pocket of the bag).My little hiking tripod fits really nice down the back of this back (THE reason I got the bag - my other cross body back does NOT work well with a tripod and I hike at night with shutter speeds in the seconds, not fractions of seconds, so I have to have a tripod).That is how I have the bag packed at the moment. I will probably move a few things around after the first hike. I do haul this bag around with me on the daily, and this is where I have a gripe.The strap is "fine" when it is on, across your body. I am a 6' tall man, in the 250# range. So I am not a small person, but I am also not huge. The strap on this thing is nice and wide, feels like it will break in well, BUT it is short, and not very happy accepting a strap mount quick release camera clip (it fits, but it crunches the strap). My camera clip is only about 2 inches from the end of the padded portion of the strap, and still sits up near my collar bone when I have the bag across my body. The small strap that you can also wear that goes under your arm is at the lowest part of its travel just under my camera clip.Hopefully this "end of adjustments" wear of the straps will be comfortable, but if you are a larger, taller person, just be prepared to run the adjustments out to their limits. I had my girlfriend look for me to see if maybe I was wearing the bag very low on my back, or had something setup weird, and she said it was nice and high on my back, and it didn't look like anything was still wrapped up weird. We'll see, but it is not a system designed with people with large frames.Finally by biggest complaint, and what might lead me to send this back is how it feels to throw it over the left shoulder for walking to your car or just casually hanging out and not wanting to throw the entire bag over your head to wear it across your body. It does NOT work well at all as a shoulder bag, at all, even a little, no sir.The strap is entirely designed (and well) to be used as a cross body bag. It is off center to help it hold well across your body and over your head. This means that if you want to use it on your shoulder, you're going to have to use one hand on the strap to keep it on your shoulder, or it will slide right off. I do not like wearing a full backpack when I hike (short 4 mile hikes at most) so I wear a sling bag. I only really throw it over my head and wear it across my body when I am hiking, not in my daily life. I load the bag pretty heavy, I am "squishy" so I look like a snowman when it is wrapped around me as a cross body bag.I'll give it this week to see how frustrated I get with the shoulder slippage and I hope I will figure out a technique to keep it there. If it can't hang, I'll request a return.
Trustpilot
1 month ago
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