Featured Articles
I Printed a 10 Foot Image and It Was Almost TOO Big
Printing a photo that's nearly 10 feet wide sounds excessive, but I wanted something that would completely transform my space. What started as a simple landscape shoot quickly turned into the largest (and most rewarding) print I've ever created.
A Beginner's Guide on How to Choose Between a Prime Lens and a Zoom
The first question most photographers ask after buying a camera is "what lens should I get next?" The second question, usually triggered by a forum post or a YouTube video, is "should I get a prime or a zoom?" And the advice they receive is almost always the same: primes are sharper, primes force you to think, primes make you a better photographer.
What to Bring to Your First Wedding: A 12-Year Veteran's Bare-Minimum Gear List
Shooting your first wedding without a solid gear plan is how you end up losing someone's photos forever. The stakes are real: you're getting paid to document something that can never be repeated, and the wrong equipment decisions can end your wedding photography career before it starts.
The Hasselblad X2D II 100C Has a Feature No Other Camera Has Pulled Off Yet
Shooting with a 100 MP medium format camera sounds like it should be complicated, slow, and demanding. The Hasselblad X2D II 100C makes a strong case that it doesn't have to be any of those things, and it's doing something with HDR imaging that no other camera has managed to execute.
Sony APS-C's Best 56mm Prime Isn't What Most People Own
The Sigma 56mm f/1.4 has long been one of the most popular prime lenses for Sony APS-C shooters, but the Viltrox 56mm f/1.2 has been making a serious case for dethroning it. This head-to-head comparison puts both lenses through a structured scoring system across every meaningful category, from autofocus to bokeh to corner sharpness.
5 Photography Fundamentals That Even Experienced Shooters Get Wrong
Shooting wide open all the time, ignoring backgrounds, forgetting context — these aren't beginner mistakes. They're the kind of habits that quietly hold back even seasoned shooters, and most people don't notice until they look back at their own work.
Even Ansel Adams Isn't Sacred Anymore
A well-known New York gallery fed one of the most famous photographs ever made into an AI model and offered the colorized result for $10,000 at a major photography fair. The Ansel Adams Trust was never told, and, according to the Trust, the gallery refused to take it down when asked.
Stop Squinting: How to Fix macOS’s Tiny Upload Window Icons
If you use a Mac, you’ve probably hit this infuriating UI quirk: when you click "Upload," the macOS file picker displays microscopic thumbnails. Unlike a normal Finder window, there’s no slider to scale them up. Fortunately, there’s a permanent, 30-second fix. We just have to bypass the UI and tell macOS exactly what we want using Terminal.
Seascape Photography: Navigating Safety and Creativity on the Beach
Let's go through a few questions you need to ask yourself to safely capture seascapes, and take note of technical considerations to ensure the resulting images showcase natural elements like motion blur correctly.
Fujifilm's 2026 Lineup Explained: Which Camera Is Actually Right for You
Fujifilm's camera lineup in 2026 spans everything from compact fixed-lens cameras to 102-megapixel medium format monsters, and choosing the wrong one is an expensive mistake. Knowing where each model sits and what it's actually built for can save you a lot of second-guessing.
Adobe's New AI Credit Cost Preview in Photoshop: What You Need to Know
Photoshop's AI tools are getting more expensive to use, and until recently, you had no way to know what something would cost before you clicked generate. Adobe has quietly added credit cost transparency to Photoshop, and if you're using any of the generative AI features, you should be planning your workflow.
7 Premiere Pro Habits That Are Making Your Edits Look Amateur
Knowing every tool in Premiere Pro still won't save you if your editing habits are working against you. Seven specific habits quietly mark your work as amateur, and most editors never realize they have them until they see their own work next to someone who's actually been hired to edit professionally.
Platinum Palladium Prints Can Last Thousands of Years. Here's What It Takes to Make One
Platinum palladium printing is one of the oldest photographic processes still in active use, dating back to the 1880s. Prints made this way can last thousands of years, and no two are identical because every coat of chemistry applied by hand is different.
Beyond the Camera: 10 Things Photographers Can’t Travel Without
The world has never been more documented than it is today, with digital creatives of all types capturing and sharing their experiences online. That's why what sits around your camera matters just as much as the camera itself. Here's a battle-tested list of ten non-camera essentials designed to keep you productive, powered, protected, and connected wherever you go.
How to Build a Photography Portfolio That Gets You Hired
The gap between "good photographer" and "hired photographer" is almost never about skill. It is about presentation. Thousands of talented photographers never get paid because their portfolio does not communicate what they do, who they do it for, or why someone should trust them with a job. Meanwhile, photographers with less raw ability but a focused, well-curated portfolio book steadily because clients can look at their work and immediately understand what they are going to get.
Why Your Landscape Edits Look Flat
Flat-looking landscape edits are one of the most common complaints, and the fix is simpler than most tutorials make it out to be. The problem usually isn't exposure or color: it's tonal range, and specifically how it's distributed across the frame.
The Most Underrated Micro Four Thirds Lens Right Now
The Panasonic 9mm f/1.7 is one of the most overlooked lenses in the Micro Four Thirds system. It's compact, weather-sealed, and fast, yet it rarely comes up in conversations about wide angle glass.
The Reason Landscape Photography Works as Stress Relief
Landscape photography has a reputation for being a hobby, but for many people it functions more like medicine. The question is whether that's just romanticizing time outdoors or whether there's something real behind it.
Adobe Quietly Added a New Depth Range Mask to Photoshop
Photoshop's depth range mask just got a quiet but significant upgrade, and most people missed it entirely. Adobe added it to the current shipping version of Camera Raw with almost no announcement, and it changes how you can make localized adjustments based on distance from the camera.
We Review the Viltrox Vintage Z1 Pro Retro Style On-Camera Flash
There are probably as many portable flash options on the market now as there are roads that lead to Rome, and just as many reasons to use one. But if we are talking about one that has a classically inspired design, is portable, and delivers professional functionality with studio-grade lighting, we might just have a reason to get one. We are talking about the latest release by Viltrox, the Vintage Z1 Pro Retro On-Camera Flash.
A Real-World $500 Night Photography Kit That Gets Pro Results
You'd love to purchase a quality camera, lens, and even a tripod. But photography is expensive! Is it possible to purchase these for as low as $500? Let's have a look!
How to Organize 10,000 Photos Without Losing Your Mind
Somewhere around the 5,000-photo mark, most photographers realize they have a problem. The images are scattered across three folders on a laptop, two external drives, a phone, a cloud account, and a memory card they forgot to import. There is no naming convention. There are duplicates everywhere. The folder called "Misc" has 800 files in it. And the idea of finding a specific shot from two years ago feels roughly as achievable as finding a specific grain of sand on a beach.
You're Walking Past These Subjects Every Single Day
The difference between a forgettable walk and a productive shoot often comes down to how closely you're paying attention, not how far you've traveled.Simon Booth makes exactly that case in this video, shot entirely along roadsides and footpaths in the Cairngorms National Park, and the results are hard to argue with.
Film Photos Looking Flat? Three Fixes That Actually Work
Film photography has a way of humbling you fast. You shoot a roll, wait days to see the results, and get back something flat, muddy, or just... off. This helpful video lays out three specific reasons this keeps happening and what to fix, and none of them require spending more money on gear.
How to Shoot Minimalist Long Exposures When the Light Refuses to Cooperate
Shooting minimalist photography with long exposures is harder than it looks, especially when the tide is actively trying to trap you. Gary Gough takes that challenge head-on at Happisburgh Beach in Norfolk, working a low tide window to pull compositions out of groynes, sunken structures, and a half-buried tide bell before the sea forces a retreat.