Featured Articles
When the Gear on Your Shelf Stops Being Just Inventory
The popular rule of selling unused gear after six months describes one specific kind of author, and photographers who keep specialized equipment connected to their actual practice are not the kind it had in mind.
Why Separation Makes or Breaks a Wide Angle Forest Shot
Photographing palm trees on a tropical coastline sounds straightforward until you're actually standing in front of a tangled cluster of trunks, messy sand, and scattered coconuts with no obvious composition in sight. Finding a shot that goes beyond a simple silhouette takes deliberate thinking about separation, foreground interest, and depth.
Before Cartier-Bresson, There Was André Kertész
Long before many of the photographers we now refer to as masters of the art of photography, André Kertész was quietly changing what photography could be. Born in Hungary in 1894, Kertész wasn't chasing the spectacle or the drama. He found meaning in ordinary moments such as a shadow stretching across a wall, a lone figure crossing a courtyard, a fork resting on a plate, sunlight pouring through a window. He understood something that still resonates today: that a photograph doesn't need a grand subject to carry emotional impact.
Fujifilm X System After 11 Years: What a Working Landscape Photographer Actually Thinks
Fujifilm's X system has been a quiet workhorse for serious landscape work for over a decade, and the debate about whether crop sensor cameras can hold their own professionally never really goes away. Andy Mumford's answer, built on 11 years of real-world use across five continents, is worth paying attention to.
The Case Against Chasing Epic: Why Your Local Forest Might Be Your Best Subject
Chasing dramatic landscapes and remote destinations is easy to justify when the results look stunning on social media. But Adam Gibbs, who has photographed Antarctica, Patagonia, Iceland, and the Canadian Rockies, has spent years questioning whether spectacular scenery actually produces better photographs.
Finding Frames Inside Frames: A Summer Beech Woodland Shoot
Shooting in summer woodland feels like a compromise before you even start. The light is harsh, the shadows are heavy, and translating a complex three-dimensional forest into a compelling two-dimensional frame is genuinely difficult.
Carry-On Rules Are Getting Stricter for Photographers in 2026: Here's How to Adapt Your Kit
If you fly with a camera bag, 2026 is the year the gate finally caught up with you. The bag that "always made it on" for the last five years is now getting weighed, measured, and gate-checked with a consistency that did not exist before. For most travelers this is an annoyance. For photographers it is a real problem, because a camera kit is the densest, heaviest, and least checkable thing most people carry. A few bodies, a couple of fast lenses, batteries, and a charger can push past a 7-kilogram cabin limit before you have packed a single shirt, and unlike a sweater, you cannot exactly stuff a 70-200mm into the overhead and hope.
What 15 Years of Mentoring Photographers Taught Me About Photography Itself
There's something people often misunderstand about photography workshops. They think workshops exist to improve technique.
Seven Photography Habits That Are Quietly Ruining Your Shots
Putting your lens cap back on after every shot is costing you photos. It sounds like a minor habit, but when a moment happens in front of you and your hands are fumbling with gear, it's gone.
A $999 Anamorphic Lens vs. a $3,900 Cinema Lens: How Close Is the Gap?
Anamorphic lenses produce a look that's immediately recognizable: stretched bokeh, horizontal lens flares, and a cinematic quality that's defined Hollywood films for decades. The question most people face is whether that distinctive look is worth the tradeoffs compared to a conventional spherical lens.
The Lightroom Masking Trick That Separates a Flat Bird Shot From a Striking One
Bird photography is brutally unforgiving when it comes to editing. A dull background, clashing colors, or a flat-looking subject can kill an otherwise great shot, and getting it right in Lightroom takes a specific sequence of decisions that most people skip.
Leica SL3-P Review: Is This the Hybrid Camera the SL System Always Needed?
The Leica SL3-P positions itself as Leica's answer to a problem that has frustrated SL system users for a while: you had to choose between the video-focused SL3-S and the resolution-focused SL3, and if you shoot both stills and video seriously, neither option was a clean fit. The SL3-P sits between them, and Leica calls it the best camera they've ever made.
The Best Premium Compact Cameras in 2026
The compact camera is having a genuine revival, and it has caught the industry slightly off guard. Models that sat ignored for years are now selling out, prices are climbing, and manufacturers that abandoned the category are scrambling back into it. The reason is simple: people who grew up shooting on phones increasingly want something that feels deliberate, looks distinctive, and delivers image quality a phone cannot match. A premium compact earns its place by beating your phone at one of four things: image quality, reach, video, or the sheer pleasure of carrying and using it.
Why Posing Maternity Clients Starts Long Before You Pick Up Your Camera
Why do I tell every maternity client, "Show up in your pajamas and I will take care of you"? Great maternity portraits have very little to do with fancy equipment or complicated lighting setups. They start with trust, and that trust begins long before the camera comes out.
How to Actually Use an 85mm Lens for Better Portraits
Buying an 85mm lens is one of the most common moves in portrait photography, and it's also one of the most misunderstood. The lens has a reputation for good reason, but the way most people use it wastes most of what makes it worth owning.
Sony's Two Best Cameras Compared: Where the a7R VI Actually Beats the a1 II
Choosing between the Sony a7R VI and the Sony a1 II is genuinely difficult, and the spec sheets don't make it any easier. On paper, the two cameras overlap so heavily that you could easily talk yourself into either one without ever really knowing if you made the right call.
In 2026, I Still Carry an Olympus Stylus Infinity
Photography, in this social media era, has become exhausting.
A $135 Full Frame Lens That Shouldn't Be This Good
At $135 a full frame autofocus 50mm lens sounds like a compromise waiting to happen. The Yongnuo 50mm f/1.8S DF is that lens, and it turns out the compromises are a lot smaller than you'd expect.
Le Mans in 40 Hours: One Photographer's Gear, Access, and Survival Guide
Shooting the 24 Hours of Le Mans sounds thrilling until you realize you're standing inches from cars doing 200 mph for 40 hours straight. The gear choices, accreditation requirements, and shooting approach at an event like this are genuinely different from anything else in motorsport photography.
Testing the 7Artisan 35mm f/2.8 LTM Lens
To paraphrase a favorite pair of authors of mine: once is never, twice is always. Not sure where the third and fourth times something goes wrong rates.
Because that's how many times my Leica MP pulled my bulk-loaded film out of the canister. Not the camera's fault; instead, the cheap tape I've been using didn't seem to be holding up to the stress of those final few tugs of the film advance. The first time it was something important: two dozen arrests during a protest downtown. Thankfully the rest were less important, mostly technical shots for this lens review.
Adobe Is Buying One of the Last Good Things in Photo Editing
Adobe announced on June 25 that it has agreed to acquire Topaz Labs, the Dallas company whose denoising, sharpening, and upscaling tools quietly became part of how a huge number of photographers finish their work. Neither side put a number on the deal. Closing is targeted for the back half of 2026, assuming regulators sign off. Adobe says Topaz CEO Eric Yang will stay on, the standalone apps will keep running, and the underlying models will eventually flow into Firefly, Firefly Services, and Creative Cloud apps.
Viltrox Redesigned Its 35mm f/1.2 LAB (N) and We Can See Why It Makes Sense: A Close-Look Review
Why fix what isn't broken? Well, Viltrox seems to have a good subtle reason as to why it did with the 35mm f/1.2 LAB (N) that photographers might appreciate.
Apple's Cheapest MacBook Ever Is an Amazing Deal
The MacBook Neo sits at the bottom of Apple's MacBook lineup, and that single fact shapes everything about it. At its price point, it goes up against laptops that routinely disappoint, which makes what Apple has pulled off here genuinely worth paying attention to.
Camera Raw 18.4 Finally Has the Gradient Feature Photographers Have Wanted for 10 Years
Camera Raw 18.4 just shipped with three masking features that Lightroom still doesn't have, and one of them has been on photographers' wish lists for over a decade.
The Loneliness Nobody Warns You About in Landscape Photography
Shooting landscapes solo sounds peaceful in theory, but for many people it's genuinely difficult at first, especially if you've spent most of your life surrounded by others. Ian Worth spent nearly two decades earning a living with a camera, and even he found the transition jarring.