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Patented gear for creators. Shipping worldwide since 2010.

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Camera Systems

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Phone Systems

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Accessories

One System.
Every Camera.
Every Phone.

Like your camera Outex is a system of separate, interoperable parts that work together. Compatible with: lights, tripods, mounts, triggers, domes, tethering, and more, even underwater.

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Outex works with virtually any camera, lens, or phone — DSLR, mirrorless, medium-format, film, cinema and mobile.

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Trusted By Professionals Around The World Since 2010

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Why Outex Stands Out

Universal Compatibility

Works with all cameras (DSLR, mirrorless, film, medium-format, cinema, etc.), and phones.

Professional Results

Optical Glass Ports & Domes (Not plastic/acrylic) for professional imaging results.

Waterproof 10m/33ft

Ideal for snorkeling, swimming, boating, kayaking, SUP, adventure, and travel. IP68

Travel-Friendly

Adds no weight or bulk to your gear or travel. Fits inside your existing camera bag.

Blog posts

Proof That Cinema Can Be Powerful in Just Minutes - "Me Enseña" Surf Film

Behind Me enseña — A Quiet Force in Frames There’s a hushed intensity to Reagan Matthew’s short film Me enseña. It doesn’t grab you with spectacle — it invites you to lean in. Shadows stretch; silence lingers; a gesture, a glance, a flicker of expression carries weight. The narrative feels less like a story told and more like a moment lived, lingering just beyond the edge of one’s attention. Matthew’s voice as a filmmaker is subtle but exacting. He trusts that the camera can convey what words cannot — the unspoken hurt, the tender reckoning, the moment someone learns (or is taught) how fragile our bonds can be. Me enseñabecomes a kind of visual parable: every cut, every hold, every nuanced shift in light or breath is deliberate. In those quiet places, the film finds its emotional gravity. It’s this sensibility — the confidence in restraint, the belief in image over exposition — that marks Me enseña as a work to watch and unpack.

Capturing Legacy in the Waves: The Man in the Yellow Cap

Discover “The Man in the Yellow Cap,” a surf documentary filmed with waterproof camera housings that honors Encinitas waterman Mark Drewelow. The short film “The Man in the Yellow Cap” premieres in Encinitas to honor bodysurfing legend Mark Drewelow. Filmed using professional waterproof camera housings, the documentary captures his ocean legacy, community spirit, and the power of storytelling through surf cinematography.
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