Wandrd Prvke Pocket Review: A Traveling Pilot’s Perspective
An EDC carry bag that promises weather resistance and thoughtful organization, but does it actually hold up when the weather turns? A working travel photographer and airline pilot puts the Wandrd Prvke Pocket through its paces across real shooting conditions. Full review including features and who this bag is actually built for.
[apologies for any text or picture formatting issues, will address this once I get back home and not writing blog posts on the road/iPad]
I’ll be honest. I have a backpack problem.
Over the years I’ve owned more camera bags than I care to admit, always hunting for the one that does everything without compromise. After a recent Paris layover hauling three lenses over 17 miles of city walking across two days of shooting, I think the Wandrd Prvke Pocket might finally end the search.
From Messenger to Backpack
For years my daily carry was the Peak Design Messenger V1, which I still consider one of the best shoulder bags ever made. Simple, accessible, elegant. The problem is my shoulders have voted it off the island after too many double digit mile city walks loaded with camera gear. My messenger bag era sadly had to end.
The role I needed to fill is specific: equal parts EDC, work bag, and travel photography kit for a pilot who is literally always on the move. Fast access, smart organization, camera friendly, and comfortable enough to survive airports, transit systems, and long walkabouts in whatever city I’ve landed in. Most bags fail at least one of those. The Prvke Pocket doesn’t.
First Impressions
Wandrd is a smaller company out of Utah that built its reputation on a roll top backpack line. I always appreciated the aesthetic but the form never quite worked for my needs. The 31L Prvke Pocket is a different direction, and a better one.
Nothing feels overworked or gimmicky, but the attention to detail is evident as soon as you start loading it up. Build quality feels solid throughout and the materials seem durable enough to handle the weekly punishment of planes, trains, and long city walks. Worth noting, the Pocket and Zip versions share most of the same features. The Zip has a cleaner front profile and honestly looks a bit sharper. But the front pocket was the specific feature I’d been chasing, so the choice was easy.
Getting ready for a day out on the Paris streets.
Organization and Features
The front pocket is the headline and it earns the attention. A lot of bags offer front pockets that are little more than a flat afterthought. Wandrd’s is genuinely deep and well organized, with enough internal structure to hold a Kindle, AirPods, charger, backup battery, and a few other grab and go items without turning into a black hole. I can even stow my iPad in there for quick access. The room and organization feel deliberate rather than excessive. One small nit, I wish the inside of the cover had a few mesh organizers or zippered pockets to round it out.
The two top pockets punch above their weight. The smaller rear facing one handles glasses, wallet, and passport with ease. The larger front facing one opens a full 180 degrees and is surprisingly roomy. On work trips I keep my flight headset, noise cancelling headphones, and sunglasses in there with room to spare, and I’ve been known to shove a sandwich in alongside them. It’s a fine kitchen sink pocket.
The interior back panel handles charging cables, my writing pad, iPad, travel wallet, and miscellaneous life & carry on essentials. More room than you’d expect and sensibly laid out.
I ordered the bag with the optional Essential Camera Cube and I’m glad I did. It adds organization and rigidity to the main compartment, which is a fair tradeoff when you’re carrying gear you actually care about. On the Paris trip I had my Fujifilm X-T5 with the XF16-55mm mkII, the XF10-24mm wide angle, and the smaller XF23mm pancake which fit perfectly. Three lenses is unusual for me since I generally prefer traveling light, but the Prvke handled it without complaint.
One small addition worth mentioning, I added Wandrd’s interlocking zipper pulls for basic anti theft peace of mind. Walking through busy European train stations, it’s a worthy upgrade.
On the Body
Comfort matters and the Prvke delivers. The back panel is well ventilated, the shoulder straps are genuinely comfortable rather than just adequate, and the adjustable chest strap fits well without feeling like you’re suiting up for an expedition. My longest walk with a full load has been nine miles with zero complaints, which is the kind of field data that actually matters. Small gripe, the chest strap clip is a bit fiddly to engage at times especially one handed.
At just over 6 feet tall, I also don’t need my backpack looking like a grade school accessory on my back. The 31L fits well and carries everything I need with room to spare. Wandrd also offers a 21L for different packing needs and body types.
Looking good with my bike that I keep in Amsterdam, nice and comfortable for long meandering rides.
Fits right in the cockpit with no worries.
In the Field
As a pilot, a bag’s first test is often just getting to work. The Prvke slides under economy seat rows and jump seats without issue, which certainly matters when carry on space is at a premium. The slight flexibility of the bag helps it conform to tight spaces better than more rigid packs would.
Camera access is easy via the side pocket, which also smartly includes small item organizers in the flap. The water bottle and tripod pocket has a handy integrated strap to stabilize tripods, or baguettes, as the situation demands.
One thing worth mentioning, accessing the rear back panel requires moving the shoulder straps out of the way first. It’s a minor nuisance when you want to grab your tablet/laptop quickly or change lenses. I’d prefer the straps didn’t interfere, but I’m learning to work with it.
Weather protection matters here too. The bag is built from P900D tarpaulin and N840D ballistic nylon, with YKK zippers throughout. A rain fly is available separately for full protection, which stows in the handy bottom pocket. Though I’ve mostly enjoyed good weather so far, it’s only a matter of time before this thing gets a proper soaking in all day slog. I shall report back.
The Prvke in Amsterdam with my typical Sony RX10iv loadout vs the Fuji kit. Plenty of room for a puffy jacket layer as well.
The ‘kitchen sink’ pocket holding all the things including dinner.
The Good
The aesthetic is modern without being tactical or overdone, and it doesn’t broadcast “camera gear inside” to everyone on the street. Organization is thoughtful throughout, and the large kitchen sink top pocket is a quiet standout. It’s comfortable for long carries, lightweight before you’ve packed anything, and flexible enough to fit in tight spots.
The hidden security pocket, dedicated AirTag slot, and luggage pass through round out a genuinely well considered feature set. At around $254 (bag only) it sits at the higher end of the market, but it earns it in my estimation.
The Not So Good
The side water bottle pocket is the biggest miss. Having to use a zipper to access it is inconvenient, and the zipper sticks at the bottom corner every single time. A simple stretch pocket like most competing bags use would be a straightforward improvement.
Though I’m getting used to it, the shoulder strap interference with the rear panel is a recurring annoyance. Particularly in the cockpit and any time you need to access the camera cube for a lens swap.
A couple of slim grab handles on the sides or bottom would also be welcome for the moments when you want to pick the bag up quickly. And if you use the Peak Design Capture system, the shoulder straps are not compatible, which is worth knowing before you buy.
Finally, the bag doesn’t stand on its own reliably depending on how it’s loaded. Not a dealbreaker, just something to be aware of.
Who Is This For
If you’re a travel photographer who moves through cities on foot and needs a bag that works equally well in an airport, on a train, and on a 10 mile walkabout, this is for you. It’d also work well for outdoor adventures once you land somewhere with action on the mind. And of course if you’ve also outgrown the messenger bag era of your life, this works quite well.
Final Verdict
The Prvke Pocket is one of the more thoughtfully designed bags I’ve carried, and the first backpack in a while to genuinely hold up against my specific needs. The front pocket alone was worth the switch from messenger bag life, and the overall comfort and organization have made it a bag I reach for without hesitation. A few refinements would make it exceptional. As it stands, it’s a great bag, and I plan to keep it around for a long time.
Disclaimer: Purchased with my own money. No sponsorship from Wandrd.