Featured Articles
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.
A Heron, a Crab, and a Safari Truck: 7 Wildlife Shot Problems Solved
Knowing your gear is one thing. Knowing what to do when the shot isn't working is another. This breakdown of seven real wildlife situations covers the kind of fieldcraft that doesn't show up in spec sheets or camera manuals.
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.
What Shutter Speed Does and How to Choose the Right One
Almost nothing is more fundamental and important than shutter speed. Here's everything you need to know about it.
TTArtisan APS-C AF 35mm f.1.8 II: The Perfect Every Day Carry Lens
When it comes to focal length choice, my photography goes in cycles. For a few years now I've been shooting 28mm and 35mm, but recently decided it was time to move back to the 50mm focal range.
Why Family Photographs Matter More Than Ever
Photography has always occupied a curious position. It can be art, journalism, testimony, or obsession. But before any of that, it is memory made visible. And nowhere does that become more apparent than in the family photograph.
A Two-Year Journey From Landscape Photography to the Streets
Feeling creatively stuck is one of the most common problems in photography, and the advice to "pick a genre and stick to it" might be making it worse. Rick Bebbington spent years labeling himself a landscape photographer, and by his own account, that label kept him stalled for a long time.
How to Know When a Portrait Belongs in Black and White
Shooting portraits in black and white is a genuine creative decision, not just a stylistic default. The difference between a black and white image that works and one that falls flat comes down to whether the light, expression, and mood were already there before you pulled the color out.
The Canon EOS R6 V Has Active Cooling, IBIS, and Internal Raw for $2,500 — So What's the Catch?
The Canon EOS R6 V lands at $2,500 with active cooling, IBIS, open gate 7K, and internal Raw — a spec sheet that would have cost you significantly more just a couple of years ago. The obvious question is how it actually performs against cameras like the Sony FX3 at $4,300 and the Canon EOS C50 at $3,900, and whether the gap in price reflects a meaningful gap in real-world image quality.
The Viltrox 50mm f/2 Air Costs Half as Much. Can the Evo 55mm f/1.8 Justify the Price?
Choosing between the Viltrox 50mm f/2 Air and the newer Viltrox 55mm f/1.8 Evo isn't just a matter of budget. At $199 versus $370, these two lenses represent genuinely different philosophies, and if you already own the Air, you might be wondering whether the Evo is worth the jump.
5 Features Every Camera Should Have by Now
Every camera manufacturer in 2026 can build a sensor that resolves fine detail, an autofocus system that tracks a bird in flight, and a video engine that records 4K at 60 frames per second. The engineering on the headline specs is genuinely impressive across the board. And then you buy the camera, try to charge it from the same cable you use for your laptop, and scream into a pillow.
I Rejected a Photo Most People Would Probably Publish
There is a particular kind of psychological illness that affects photographers after enough years behind a camera.
Mastering Light for Better Macro and Close-Up Photography
Macro and close-up photography is something we can all do, anywhere. We can find objects at home to photograph, or head outside into a local field or forest. It's a very enjoyable genre of photography. One of the more popular subjects to photograph is wildflowers.
The Panasonic Lumix L10 Is the Premium Compact Camera the Market Has Been Missing
Compact cameras are making a serious comeback in 2026, and the Panasonic Lumix L10 is one of the most compelling arguments for why that matters. It pairs a 26.5-megapixel Micro Four Thirds sensor borrowed from the Lumix GH7 with a 24–75mm f/1.7–2.8 equivalent zoom lens in a body that's genuinely pocketable.
Sony a7 V Street Test: Is Pre-Capture Actually Cheating?
The Sony a7 V is a serious tool for street photography, and the question of whether its most powerful features cross a line worth thinking about. Pre-capture, silent shutter, and subject-tracking autofocus all raise real questions about what street photography actually demands from you and your gear.
Objective vs. Subjective Framing: The Coverage Decision That Changes Everything
Choosing between objective and subjective camera coverage is one of the most consequential decisions you make when planning a scene. The difference between showing an audience what's happening and making them feel it from the inside can transform a competent scene into an unforgettable one.
The Real Cost of Shooting Film in 2026 (And Why It Might Be Worth It Anyway)
Film is expensive, inconvenient, and gives you zero instant feedback. A single shot on medium or large format can run you the equivalent of a few dollars once you factor in the film stock, processing, and scanning. Those aren't reasons to dismiss it entirely, though.
Dear Lisa: I Want to Go Pro, but Selling Myself Makes Me Feel Sick
Dear Lisa,
I've loved photography for years and have always treated it as a hobby. Over time, friends, family, and people they know have asked me to photograph birthdays, couples, small events, and the odd portrait session. I never really advertised myself; it just sort of happened.
Matt Black: The Geography of Poverty
Matt Black has spent much of his career doing something most photographers avoid: staying uncomfortable long enough that it stops being a moment and instead starts becoming a pattern. A member of Magnum Photos, Black is best known for his long-term project American Geography, a six-year journey across the United States in which he traveled over 100,000 miles and 46 states. During this journey, his focus was specific and deliberate. Black documented communities with concentrated poverty, defined as places where at least 20% of the population lives below the poverty line. What he found challenges one of the most deeply embedded narratives in American culture.
Instagram's Optional AI Labels Are Worse Than No Labels at All
Instagram has started testing an "AI creator" label, an account-level badge that tells viewers a profile "posts content that was generated or modified with AI." It is clearer than the vague "AI info" tag Meta already sprinkles on some posts, and it reads like a step toward honesty in a feed increasingly clogged with synthetic images and video. There is one detail that undoes all of it. The label is entirely optional.
The 3 Sharpest Pancake Lenses Worth Owning
Pancake lenses are a niche obsession, but they solve a real problem: full-size image quality in a package small enough to actually carry. Most of them cut corners on sharpness to hit that tiny footprint, but a handful genuinely don't.
Your Layer Mask Isn't the Problem: Here's What Actually Causes Hair Fringing
Fringing around hair and fur is one of the most stubborn problems you'll run into when cutting out subjects in Photoshop. No matter how clean your layer mask looks, switching to a new background can expose a halo of the original background color that ruins the shot.
Van Life in a Scottish Downpour: Gear, Condensation, and One Unexpected Waterfall
Shooting landscapes in the rain sounds miserable, and sometimes it is. But the difference between a wasted day and a productive one often comes down to how you adapt when conditions refuse to cooperate.