Manfrotto has never been shy about who it builds for, but the new Uncover lineup is a clear pivot toward the always-moving crowd — people who shoot between a day job, a content calendar and a spontaneous weekend away. It’s a four-bag family that tries to bridge camera protection and everyday carry without looking like a padded brick strapped to your back.
The range went on sale on July 1, 2026, and splits into two backpacks and two soft bags:
- Uncover 30L Backpack — US$330
- Uncover 24L Backpack — US$300
- Uncover 12L Messenger Bag — US$180
- Uncover 7L Messenger/Sling Bag — US$140
The headline trick is the SmartLift system, a removable interior camera cube that lets you flip between camera mode and everyday mode in seconds. Pull the cube and the bag becomes a plain daypack; drop it back in and you’ve got padded gear protection. It’s a smarter answer to the age-old problem of not wanting to lug a dedicated camera bag everywhere.
The 30L Backpack is the flagship, with an expandable 25–33L capacity and enough structured room for a mirrorless or compact DSLR body plus three to five lenses — including a 70–200mm attached. The 24L steps down to an expandable 20.5–28.5L, fitting one body, up to three lenses and accessories. Both use a roll-top design and a custom TriTex three-layer fabric exterior for water resistance, so a surprise downpour on the way to a shoot shouldn’t spell disaster.
The two messenger bags lean harder into the urban-creator angle. The 12L and 7L both include a dedicated AirTag pocket — a genuinely useful touch when your bag holds thousands of dollars of glass — and a laser-cut FlexGrid front panel for strapping on pouches, cables or whatever else your workflow demands. The 7L doubles as a sling, which makes it the natural grab-and-go option for a single body and a lens.
What makes Uncover interesting isn’t any single feature but the framing. Manfrotto is openly targeting a younger, hybrid audience that refuses to choose between a work bag, a camera bag and a travel bag. The modular SmartLift cube is the mechanism that makes that promise plausible rather than marketing fluff — the same shell genuinely serves multiple roles.
Pricing lands where you’d expect for Manfrotto: the backpacks aren’t cheap at US$300 and US$330, though the messenger bags at US$140 and US$180 undercut a lot of the boutique competition. If the TriTex fabric and cube swap hold up in daily abuse, this could be one of the more sensible camera-carry buys for people who spend more time commuting than on location.