Welcome back to Bag Raid, our clapback to photographers who gatekeep. If that's you, don't let the door hit you on the way out. Otherwise, make yourself at home, beers in the fridge etc. etc. This month we clatter through Ollie Menadue's Hi-Fi Camera Sling. For reasons that will become increasingly obvious, he listens closely.
Photos: Rare Finds Sounds Design // @rarefindssound // @rarefindssounddesign.
If you wrapped your eyes around our recent campaign, you most certainly wrapped your ears around it too. That's because sound is half the picture. Our good friend Ollie from Rare Finds Sound Design, who went to town creating unique sound effects and cinematic audio, is responsible. He spills his bag, and the beans below.
Bag Raid w/ Rare Finds Sounds Design
Sony M10 - My old reliable recorder, which is great for travelling as the batteries last for ages. I took it to Asia recently and didn’t swap them out for the entire two months.
Lumix S9 - The first full-frame camera I’ve owned and quite the step up from using my iPhone. I pair it with either the 18–40mm kit lens, the 50mm Lumix lens, or an old Canon FD 1.4 lens. It depends if I'm filming myself or the environment. Keen to get my hands on the new Lumix 40mm f2 too!
Small Omni Mics - A pair of small omnidirectional mics called the Mini Verdi’s by Oaka Instruments for recording ambiences. Really sensitive mics.
Earphones - Small little Apple cable ones with the USB-C adapter. I’ve lost plenty of those damn adaptors.
Microphone Accessories & Cables - Mic fluffies by Radius Windshields & Bubblebee Industries. These help keep my recordings clean if it's windy. Also some cable straps.
Spare Batteries - Not that I ever really need them, but just in case.
S Clip - Stuck on the outside, I use it to hang the bag on tree branches if it's wet and I don't want to put the bag on the floor or get the strap wet when hanging it up.
Keys, wallet, passport & pen - Just the essentials if I'm travelling.
Empty plastic shopping bag - For quick shops, or I wrap my water bottle in it in case it leaks all over my kit.

Hey Ollie, for anyone new to your work, how do you usually describe what you do.
Where are you based?
I’m currently bouncing back and forth between Devon and Bristol. That’s down in the south-west of the UK.
How did you get into field recording and sound design?
Both started properly in my last year of uni. I’m a drummer and sometimes it’s hard to get the rest of the band together. I started experimenting more and more with electronic music as I could do most of it on my own. I got into artists like Moderat, Boards of Canada and Bonobo, who all use field recordings and found sound samples in their tracks. When I began sampling the real world myself, I got hooked, you really hear the world differently when listening to it through headphones.
Do you remember the first sound you captured that made you want to keep going?Hmm, I think the first sound I captured was all the way back in college. I used an early Zoom H4 to sample my parents’ kitchen and turn it into a rather janky track.


What are you listening for when you arrive somewhere new?


Do you approach recording like photography – waiting for a moment, or building one?


What’s in your Hung Supply bag?


How does the Hi-Fi Sling fit into your workflow when you’re out recording?

You’ve built a library of sounds used in film and edits – what makes a “good” sound to you?
What’s one thing you’re trying to get better at – creatively or personally?


Carry like Ollie with the Hi-Fi Camera Sling.













































