Why Slowing Down Improved My Landscape Photography

One of the biggest changes in my photography did not come from buying new gear, learning a complicated editing technique, or traveling to better locations. It came from something much simpler. I stopped relying on the idea that I could fix everything later in editing.

Active Contests
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Submit Your Best Long Exposure Shots

Welcome to the June Critique the Community!  For this contest/critique, we are doing another abstract theme that should allow more photographers to enter. For this month we want to see your best photograph that feature "Motion Blur".

The Problem With Paradise

Acapulco at night feels less like a city and more like a stage set designed by a casino architect having a mild nervous breakdown. Palm trees multiply in every direction. Floodlights blast the sand with the subtlety of a prison yard. Massive hotels rise from the coastline pretending time still moves the way it did decades ago, as if glamour could survive indefinitely through architecture and denial alone.

How to Edit Portrait Skin Tones in Lightroom

Lightroom skin tone editing is one of those things that separates a gallery that looks cohesive from one that looks like a collection of individual images. Get it wrong and even technically sharp, well-exposed portraits look off in ways clients can't always name but will absolutely feel.

The Viltrox AF 75mm f/1.8 Review: A $329 Portrait Lens That Actually Delivers

The Viltrox AF 75mm f/1.8 is a short telephoto portrait lens for APS-C mirrorless cameras, giving you a full frame equivalent of around 113mm. At $329, it sits in a price range where quality can vary wildly, and whether Viltrox has delivered something genuinely worth the money is exactly what this review puts to the test.

Understanding ICM, Part Two: Image Integrity

Beyond the gesture lies the question of what survives the movement. This part moves from the mechanics of the camera to the discipline of the image, identifying the "points of failure" where structure, color hierarchy, and spatial layers collapse into visual mud. It defines the "indexical anchor" as the boundary between a durable photographic image and a decorative dissolve.

The Website Mistakes I Keep Seeing Photographers Make

Over the years, I've looked at a ridiculous number of photography websites. Partly because I'm nosy, partly because I do website critiques, and partly because during lockdown, I worked for a marketing agency and did a lot of UX work. After a while, patterns start appearing.

Going Off-Grid: The Plug-and-Play Bluetti Balco for Creative Spaces

Have you ever wanted to run away to a cabin in the woods, live off grid, and just create freely? It sounds like a dream, but modern photo and video workflows require too much power to make it a reality, that is, until now. I traveled to Paris for the global launch of the Bluetti Balco series to find out how its new plug-and-play solar ecosystem lets creators generate and store their own energy on location.

The Camera Industry Treats Beginners Like Future Professionals. Most of Them Are Not.

The camera industry is built on a ladder. At the bottom, there is a $600 to $800 entry-level body with a kit zoom, often no in-body stabilization, a single card slot, a plastic build, and a thin lens ecosystem. At the top, there is a $3,000 to $6,000 professional body with IBIS, dual card slots, weather-sealing, a magnesium alloy chassis, and an extensive lens lineup. In between, there are two or three rungs spaced at $500 to $1,000 intervals, each one adding features the rung below deliberately omitted. The structure is obvious when you look at it from above: every camera in the lineup is designed to make you want the one above it.

3 41

Submit Your Best Long Exposure Shots

Welcome to the June Critique the Community!  For this contest/critique, we are doing another abstract theme that should allow more photographers to enter. For this month we want to see your best photograph that feature "Motion Blur".

The '90s CGI Render Challenge: Pro 3D Artists vs. Bryce 2

Bryce 2 defined the visual language of '90s CGI, and almost nothing in modern 3D software can replicate it. The raw ray tracing engine, the playful UI designed by Kai Krauss, the fog, the chrome, the fractal mountains — modern renderers have layered so many features on top of that foundation that getting back to that specific look is nearly impossible without going back to the source.

We Review the Viltrox AF 90mm f/2.2 EVO Lens

The Viltrox AF 90mm f/2.2 EVO is the company's latest in its budget-friendly, compact line of lenses for APS-C systems, and it offers excellent image quality and value for the dollar.

The Sony a7R VI Has Illuminated Buttons. Why Did It Take a Decade?

The Sony a7R VI arrived this month with 66.8 megapixels, a fully stacked sensor, 30 frames per second, and 8.5 stops of stabilization. The spec sheet is extraordinary. But the feature that will matter most to photographers who use their cameras after dark is one that does not appear in any resolution or burst-speed comparison: the rear buttons glow.

Why Most Beginners Quit Photography Right Before It Gets Good

I remember so vividly the excitement of when I first started taking pictures. It was all new, new, new. "Oh my God, what's this? Did you just see that?" No matter what it was I photographed, I felt a rush of pure exhilaration. Even now, 24 years later, I am thrilled to say that I still feel that rush.

OM System 100-400mm vs 50-200mm f/2.8: Which Wildlife Lens Is Worth the Money?

Choosing between the OM System 100-400mm and the OM System 50-200mm f/2.8 is one of the more genuinely difficult calls in the Micro Four Thirds wildlife kit. Both cover similar ground in terms of size and weight, but they get to their results in completely different ways, and picking the wrong one for how you actually shoot will cost you.

One Year With the Fujifilm X-M5: Is It Still the Best Camera Under $800?

The Fujifilm X-M5 sits at around $800 and punches well above that price with 6.2K open gate video, a 26-megapixel APS-C sensor, a mechanical shutter, and a hot shoe — specs that most competitors at this price point simply don't offer. After a full year of real-world use, McClure has a clear-eyed take on where this camera succeeds, where it falls short, and who it actually makes sense for.

How to Make Your Subject Pop Using Lightroom and Photoshop

Getting a sharp subject is one thing. Getting that subject to visually separate from the background and command attention is something else entirely. These editing techniques can make the difference between an image that looks decent and one that stops people mid-scroll.