Introducing Fast & Light Camera Bags
Today we’re introducing a brand new line of Fast & Light Camera bags: the Sequence 23L Camera Backpack, the Exposure 10L Vest, and three separate slings: Balance 7L, Slate 4L, & Take 1.5L.
Lightweight design. Athletic fit. Hybrid storage. Weatherproof protection. The Fast & Light line threads the needle of technical performance - low base weight, gear protection, load distribution, and access on the go, with a look you can carry everyday. Inspired by running and cycling gear, they protect your gear without getting in the way.
Why Fast & Light?
Everything in our lives has gotten faster and lighter, except for camera bags. With the resurgence of compact point-and-shoot cameras, mirrorless cameras shrinking by the year, and with mobile gear on the rise, it makes sense that camera carry should follow. But traditional camera bags have remained bulky and overly complicated, slowing us down. So we started from scratch.
Fast & Light started with the fabric. Today we’re introducing our new LightWeave™ Ripstop reinforced nylon material to all five bags. They're flyweight so you can move quickly, but durable and weather-resistant so you can keep going to far-out places. Plus, new mesh and power net pockets on each bag give you room to stretch and fit your gear for quick access.
Inspired by running and cycling, our new bags were designed to keep your gear closer to your body and so you have access the moment you need it. Refined from nearly a decade of learnings from building high-performance camera bags with renowned adventure photographers and filmmakers Emmett Sparling and Alex Strohl,, Fast & Light pulls the best features into a new single collection. The result is a system that feels as natural on the trails as it would during a a city commute.
At Moment, we’ve always been focused on movement, and these bags help us pack lighter, pack smarter, and spend less time second-guessing what to bring and more time capturing moments. They’re the camera bags you’ll love to carry even when you don’t carry your camera.


























































