I am a key worker producing PPE for healthcare workers. Our pop-up factory did not exist until three weeks ago. We are all volunteers working around the clock to get the facilities up and running and deliver free PPE direct to hospitals and surgeries. I have been using my personal DSLR to document the process.As of Friday April 17th we have delivered 5000 face shields to ICUs and surgeries.Last weekend my camera was stolen from the factory. Without it, I cannot photograph our manufacturing process.My photographs and videos have shown our PPE factory to the world and allowed us to connect with more healthcare workers around Scotland.We are now making injection moulded face shields, and will be producing 3000 per day.The BBC did a piece on us. You can see me talking about what a face shield is used for :I am raising funds to replace the camera. It was a Nikon D750 with a NIKKOR 85mm f/1.8G lens. It was in a Manfrotto camera bag.The Edinburgh Shield Force project is completely open source. We are documenting the technology and posting videos about it so any similar group can replicate the process worldwide.I have been recording video on the camera to share the manufacturing processes. You can check them out here:The theft of my camera halts this entirely. I have a camera on my phone, but it is not suitable. It is a perfectly serviceable flip phone, but it cannot take good quality photos.Please help me to purchase another camera so we can keep recording, and so we can share all our knowledge and skills to keep frontline workers of the world safe.