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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".

What Happens When You Shoot Landscapes at f/1.2

The Viltrox 35mm f/1.2 is built for portraits and low light, but Mads Peter Iversen took it into the forest for landscape work to see how far it can stretch. That tension between a wide-open prime and a genre that typically demands stopped-down sharpness makes for a genuinely interesting test.

One Speedlight, One Umbrella, and a Lighting Trick That Actually Works

Shooting portraits in bright outdoor light is one of the harder problems to solve with a single speedlight. The sun is usually too strong, your flash can't keep up, and the results look forced. Here's a specific technique that sidesteps all of that, and it's simpler than most people expect.

Ilford HP5, a 4x5 Camera, and a Ruined Victorian Quarry in North Wales

Shooting large format film in an abandoned Welsh slate quarry sounds like a niche pursuit, but the images that come out of locations like this are unlike anything a modern digital workflow produces. The combination of 4x5 film, dramatic ruins, and unpredictable natural light creates a specific kind of pressure that forces deliberate, considered photography.

Photographers Will Be Impressed With the New Photo Features in iOS 27

After some false starts, Apple has gone all out for the upcoming iOS 27, due this fall. There's a greatly improved Siri, based on Google's Gemini, and a host of AI features. Our readers will be most interested in the new photo-taking and editing features in iOS 27, and I was able to download the developer beta for a quick look around. 

I Bought The Best 35mm Camera in The World — And Made It Better

I know I've talked about my renewed interest in old film cameras before. Therefore I won't go over old ground in detail. I'll just say the main reason was the desire for a pure photography experience once again, without technology getting in my way. The only new digital camera that has given me that so far is a Leica Q2 Monochrome I purchased three years ago. I've enjoyed the experience so much, in fact, I craved more. Well, really I should say, I craved less!

Understanding ISO in Photography: What Finally Made It Click for Me in the Field

 

When I first started learning photography, ISO was probably the setting I understood the least.

Shutter speed made sense because I could see movement blur or freeze. Aperture made sense because I could see depth of field changing in the image. ISO, however, felt far more abstract. I knew it made the image brighter or darker, but beyond that I mostly treated it as a setting to avoid touching unless absolutely necessary.

The Camera Industry Ignores Its Youngest and Oldest Customers

The camera industry designs products for a narrow band of humanity. Browse the marketing material from Canon, Nikon, Sony, Fujifilm, or any other manufacturer and the target buyer is consistent: a 25-to-45-year-old enthusiast or professional, fit enough to carry a kilogram of gear on a mountain, dexterous enough to operate tiny buttons in the dark, and technically literate enough to navigate a 400-item menu system. The cameras are excellent for this person. They are less excellent for the two populations on either side of that band: the photographer over 60 whose hands, eyes, and patience have different requirements than they did at 35, and the child under 12 who wants to take real photographs with a camera that can survive being a child's possession.

Five Premium Compact Cameras Tested Side by Side: Which One Actually Wins?

Choosing a premium fixed-lens compact camera is harder than it looks, because the category spans everything from true shirt-pocket cameras to chunky near-mirrorless bodies, and the right answer depends almost entirely on what you actually shoot. The Canon PowerShot V1, Fujifilm X100VI, Panasonic Lumix LX10, Panasonic Lumix ZS300, and Sony RX100 VII are not variations on the same theme; they make fundamentally different tradeoffs across sensor size, lens range, portability, and price.

Hasselblad X2D II vs. 907X 100C: Same Sensor, Very Different Cameras

Choosing between the Hasselblad X2D II and the Hasselblad 907X 100C is genuinely difficult, and not just because both cost the same and share the same 100-megapixel sensor. The decision comes down to something more personal than specs, and getting it wrong at this price point is an expensive lesson.

How to Start Wedding Photography

The exposure triangle, autofocus modes, backup systems, flash technique, portfolio curation, and scam awareness — wedding photography demands you get competent across all of them before your first paid job. Miss any one, and you'll either lose the shots, lose the files, or lose money from your bank account.

5 Lenses Nobody Gets Excited About That Produce More Photos Than Anything in Your Bag

Photography publications, including this one, spend most of their editorial energy on exciting lenses. The fastest aperture in the category. The sharpest optic in the lineup. The new release that leapfrogs last year's model. The GM, the Art, the L-series, the S-Line flagship. These are the lenses that generate press coverage, forum arguments, and YouTube thumbnails with wide-eyed reviewers holding glass that costs more than a used car.

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.

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.