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After 15 Years and a Dozen Cameras, Here's What I Learned About Shooting the Street
In 2010, I made a decision that didn't make much sense on paper. I sold my Nikon gear and bought the first Olympus Pen E-P1.
The Sharpest 24mm Lenses You Can Buy Right Now
A $200 lens outperforming a Zeiss on corner sharpness is exactly the kind of result that shows how fast optics have moved. The 24mm focal length gives you a wide field of view with just enough drama to hold onto your subject, and paired with a bright aperture, it delivers backgrounds that fall away beautifully.
The Shutter Speed Range Most Photographers Skip Over
Most slow shutter advice sends you straight to a tripod, a waterfall, and a 30-second exposure. There's a whole range of shutter speeds you can shoot handheld that keeps part of your frame sharp while letting motion streak through it.
A Fast, High-End Nikon Camera Is Reportedly Weeks Away
Nikon is reportedly close to launching a fast, high-end, professional APS-C camera, with an announcement expected in the next couple of months. The most talked-about spec is a 45-megapixel stacked sensor in a body built for speed.
Meta Just Made Your Public Instagram Photos Fair Game for AI
Meta's new AI image generator lets anyone pull photos from a public Instagram account and feed them into AI creations, without asking the account owner or telling them afterward. The feature is switched on by default for public profiles.
650 Freelance Photographers Are Fighting the WSJ Over an AI Contract
Roughly 650 freelance photographers who work for The Wall Street Journal have refused to sign a new contract they say could funnel their images into AI training. The fight centers on two changes: who owns the photos you shoot on assignment, and the paper's new right to license those photos to third parties without asking you first.
Myth: You Must Shoot in Manual Mode to Be a Pro
There is a belief that follows almost every beginner around: that real photographers shoot in manual mode, and that the semi-automatic modes on the dial are a kind of training-wheels embarrassment you are supposed to outgrow as fast as possible. The aperture priority setting even gets the dismissive nickname "A for amateur." It is one of the most persistent myths in photography, and it is wrong. Plenty of working professionals shoot in aperture priority every day and have for decades. The mode you use says nothing about whether you are a pro. What matters is whether you understand what the camera is doing and why.
Hohem MT3 Pro Gimbal: A Solo Creator's Dream
At this point, there are so many brands of gimbals that it can be hard to know which direction to go, especially with heavy-hitting names like DJI at the forefront of most publications and media outlets. But when I saw the MT3 Pro from Hohem, there was a standout feature that made me pause.
Why Depending on One Client Nearly Ended a 20-Year Career
Editorial work once brought in 75% of one photographer's income. Today it accounts for about 5%, and the shift wasn't forced on him by failure.
Large-Format Film in the Quarries of North Wales
Abandoned slate quarries hold more than dramatic scenery. Some hide names carved into stone over a century ago, tools left where workers dropped them, and connections to people you'd never expect.
Why a Two-Decade Full Frame Shooter Switched to Micro Four Thirds
Twenty years behind a camera can lock you into fixed ideas about what gear delivers the results you want. A long-held bias against Micro Four Thirds is exactly what gets challenged here, and the reasons have less to do with specs than with how you actually shoot.
The Minimal Setup That Gets to Places a Camper Van Can't
Three days, two nights, and a mattress thrown in the back of a car with no sheets on it. That's the entire kit behind a photography trip along the northern coast of Spain, where the real work turns out to be finding angles that cooperate.
What Is the Difference Between F-Stops and T-Stops?
You may have noticed that photography lenses are marked in f-numbers, f/1.4, f/2.8, f/8, while cinema lenses are marked in T-numbers, T1.5, T2.9, and wondered whether they mean the same thing. They are closely related, they sit in the same spots on the aperture ring, and a T-number looks just like an f-number with a different letter in front. But they measure two genuinely different things, and the gap between them tells you something real about how lenses work and why a cinematographer cares about it while a portrait photographer mostly does not.
The Elegy of Imperfect Photography
There is a peculiar cult operating inside photography. You have seen them: the Autofocus Clergy.
The $150 Pancake Lens That Gets You 90% of the Fujifilm X100VI Experience
The Fujifilm X100VI has a cult following for good reason: it packs an optical viewfinder, IBIS, a built-in ND filter, and a fast fixed lens into a body small enough to carry anywhere. The catch is the price, and increasingly, the availability.
Sony RX10 V First Look: From the World Cup to the Ballard Locks
I had the good fortune of spending some time with Sony's new RX10 V, and I shot the entire range of my life with it. A World Cup match here in Seattle one weekend, then a family outing to the Ballard Locks the next.
The Tamron 17-70mm f/2.8 vs. Sigma 17-40mm f/1.8: One Wins on Paper, the Other Wins in Practice
Choosing between a wider aperture and a longer zoom range is one of the most common trade-offs in APS-C lens selection, and few comparisons make that tension as concrete as the Tamron 17-70mm f/2.8 versus the Sigma 17-40mm f/1.8. These two lenses cost $200 apart, share the same weight, start at the same focal length, and yet produce noticeably different results depending on what you're shooting.
The Print Comparison Method That Shows You What Your Screen Hides
Printing the same image twice with two different profiles and then comparing them under controlled lighting is one of the most effective ways to sharpen your eye for print quality. Most people look at a finished print and react to it instinctively, but that habit makes it nearly impossible to diagnose what's actually working or failing.
Lightroom's Intersect Mask Tool Can Solve Edits You've Been Doing the Hard Way
Lightroom's masking tools are powerful, but there are times when a sky mask or landscape mask alone won't isolate exactly what you need. The intersect tool lets you combine two masks so only their overlapping area is targeted, giving you precise control that add and subtract alone can't match.
What Is a Leaf Shutter vs. a Focal Plane Shutter?
Almost every camera has a shutter, the mechanism that controls how long light hits the sensor, but not all shutters work the same way. Among mechanical shutters, there are two main designs, the leaf shutter and the focal plane shutter, and the difference between them is not trivia. It determines how fast you can sync a flash, how quiet your camera is, how big and expensive your lenses get, and which kind of photography each system is best suited to. If you have ever wondered why a small fixed-lens camera can do something your big mirrorless body cannot, the shutter is often the reason. There are electronic shutter modes too, which we will come to, but the mechanical pair is where the story starts.
What Two Dead Drives Taught Me About the Cost of Keeping My Photos
Red lights blinking on my NAS. Drive failure. Double drive failure. I'm on RAID 6, so the data's still there, but my heart rate has increased. My day is reprioritized — time to work on this.
So I did what we all do now — I asked the internet, specifically Google's AI, how to fix it. The advice was tactically good, but it missed the real problem, and a thought stuck with me: the same AI tech I was leaning on for answers is the reason storage just got so expensive.
When storage costs this much, having good discipline with your data management practice beats blind redundancy.
7Artisans 135mm f/1.8 vs. Viltrox: Which One Is Actually Worth Buying?
Choosing between the 7Artisans 135mm f/1.8 and the Viltrox 135mm comes down to a real tradeoff: raw optical and autofocus performance versus a lighter, smaller package at a lower price. At $689, the 7Artisans sits well below the Viltrox, and that gap raises a fair question about what you're actually giving up.
5 Travel Photography Habits That Are Killing Your Photos
You come home from a trip with hundreds of images, sit down to edit, and feel nothing. It happens more than most people admit, and it usually isn't a gear problem or even a skill problem.
The Viltrox 75mm f/1.8 and 90mm f/2.2 Are Sharper Than They Have Any Right to Be at This Price
Choosing the right portrait lens for an APS-C system is genuinely hard when the native options are expensive and heavy. The Viltrox 75mm f/1.8 and Viltrox AF 90mm f/2.2 are making a strong case for themselves as lightweight, affordable alternatives for Fujifilm, Sony, and Nikon APS-C shooters.
Why Your Real Estate Window Pulls Look Fake (and How to Fix Them)
Window pulls are one of the most technically demanding parts of real estate photography post-processing, and getting them wrong is more obvious than most people expect. A bad blend doesn't just look overprocessed; it can make an entire interior shot read as fake, which undermines the entire purpose of the image.