Releases

Brevitē Jumper Max Promises Pro Camera Protection in a Stealthy Everyday Pack

Brooklyn's Brevitē launched the Jumper Max on Kickstarter at $225 early bird pricing, a camera pack built to hide its pro intentions behind a clean, minimal silhouette.

Sam Ortega2 min read
Published
Listen to this article0:00 min
Share this article:
Brevitē Jumper Max Promises Pro Camera Protection in a Stealthy Everyday Pack
Source: petapixel.com

Brooklyn-based Brevitē has built its reputation on a simple conviction: a camera bag shouldn't look like one. The Jumper Max, the brand's latest release and what Brevitē calls its most advanced bag yet, pushes that philosophy further than any of its predecessors.

The bag is designed to carry a full professional kit while passing as an ordinary everyday pack. Brevitē says the Jumper Max intentionally avoids the tactical straps, heavy branding, and overtly technical styling that typically signal "camera bag" to anyone within eyeline, opting instead for a clean silhouette that blends into everyday environments. For street photographers especially, that distinction matters. Pulling out a camera from a bag that screams "expensive gear inside" changes how subjects respond and makes you a more conspicuous target. Brevitē is pitching the Jumper Max squarely at street and travel photographers, though the brand frames the broader audience as photographers, filmmakers, and content creators who want high-capacity camera storage without the traditional camera bag aesthetic.

The Jumper Max is launching through Kickstarter, where "super" early bird backers can lock in the bag for $225. The planned retail price sits at $300, a $75 premium over the crowdfunding entry point. Brevitē is also bundling an optional accessories ecosystem around the pack, including packing cube sets, removable top inserts, cable kits, hip belts, rain covers, and battery and memory card cases. None of those appear to be included at base pricing, though exact accessory costs weren't specified in the announcement.

What the launch materials don't yet tell you is almost as important as what they do. No technical specs have been published: no internal volume in liters, no external dimensions, no weight, no materials breakdown, no weatherproofing rating, and no detail on the interior layout beyond "high-capacity camera storage." Whether that means two bodies and four lenses or one mirrorless kit and a couple of primes is still an open question. There's also no confirmed shipping timeline or geographic availability window.

AI-generated illustration
AI-generated illustration

That ambiguity is worth sitting with before backing. Crowdfunding a camera bag from an established brand like Brevitē carries less risk than backing an unknown startup, but it's still a pledge, not a purchase. Back any Kickstarter campaign with the understanding that delays happen, specs can shift between campaign and production, and there's always a real chance you can lose your money. Do your own due diligence on the campaign page before committing.

If Brevitē delivers on the promise, the Jumper Max could be a legitimate option for photographers who've grown tired of looking like a walking gear advertisement. The proof will be in the interior layout photos, the actual fabric weight, and whether that clean silhouette survives a week of real travel with a full mirrorless kit inside.

Know something we missed? Have a correction or additional information?

Submit a Tip
Your Topic
Today's stories
Updated daily by AI

Name any topic. Get daily articles.

You pick the subject, AI does the rest.

Start Now - Free

Ready in 2 minutes

Discussion

More Photography News