The 5 Best Film Stocks for Beginners in 2026

Starting in film photography means making a choice before you ever press the shutter: which film to load. The wrong stock can make a beginner's early rolls frustrating and expensive, full of muddy colors and missed exposures. The right stock is forgiving, widely available, affordable enough to shoot freely, and consistent enough that you learn from your mistakes instead of wondering whether the film was the problem. These five fit that description better than anything else on the market, and between them they cover bright daylight, saturated landscapes, mixed and low light, and the two classic black-and-white looks every new shooter should try.

10 Ways to Get Sharper Photos With a Teleconverter

Teleconverters can quietly destroy your keeper rate before you even realize what's happening. Sharpness drops, autofocus consistency gets unreliable, and tracking falls apart — all from one small piece of glass between your lens and body.

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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".

The Two-Step Method for Making Any Photo Pop in Photoshop

Photoshop's Camera Raw filter is genuinely one of the most underused tools for color grading, and most people treat it like a raw file converter rather than a full editing engine. If you've been doing your color work purely in curves or Hue/Saturation, you're leaving a lot of control on the table.

Why Consistent Street Photographers Beat Talented Ones

Street photography is genuinely hard, and most people don't tell you that upfront. Mike Chudley spent a year producing work that looked fine on Instagram but left him personally unsatisfied, and that tension between taste and ability is something most people never stop to examine.

The Canon EF 50mm f/2.5 Compact Macro Is 40 Years Old. Here's How It Holds Up.

Canon's oldest EF mount lenses are worth a second look now that they adapt so cleanly onto modern mirrorless bodies. The Canon EF 50mm f/2.5 Compact Macro is one of the more interesting cases: a lens from 1987 that regularly sells for under $100 on eBay and still communicates fully with current Canon R-series cameras, including in-body stabilization and in-camera corrections.

Skylum Adds Lightroom Library Import to Luminar Neo With a Caveat

There's a lot of competition out there for photographers' attention with recent updates of editing software. The big target for competitors is Adobe's ecosystem of programs, and many of my pro photographer friends are pretty locked in on Adobe Lightroom.

The 10 Most Important Camera Settings: A Plain-Language Glossary for Beginners

A new camera presents you with hundreds of settings, and the manuals that explain them are written as if you already understand the vocabulary. You do not need to learn all of it. You need to understand about ten settings well, because those ten control almost everything about how your photographs turn out. Here is what each one does, in plain language, without the jargon that makes photography sound harder than it is.

When Experience Stops You From Seeing

Experience makes photographers faster by teaching them to recognize patterns. The same mechanism can also prevent them from seeing photographs that do not fit those patterns.

The Sony a7R VI Has the Best Full Frame Sensor Ever Made. Here's the Catch.

The Sony a7R VI raises the resolution bar for full frame cameras to 66.8 megapixels on a fully stacked sensor, and that combination produces results that will make you rethink how much camera you actually need. The stacked design isn't just about pixels — it's what allows the a7R VI to shoot 30 frames per second with full autofocus and a blackout-free viewfinder at that resolution.

40-150mm Plastic Fantastic: Can a $100 Lens Actually Deliver?

Sharpness is one of photography's most debated specs, and it's also one of the most overrated. The Olympus 40-150mm f/4-5.6 R is widely considered one of the least sharp lenses in the Micro Four Thirds lineup, and Chris Baitson decided to take it out for a full shooting session anyway.

Viltrox 28mm F/4.5 L Review: An L-Mount Lens With the Size of a Body Cap

Behind every lens decision is a balancing act between autofocus, portability, and excellent optical quality. It usually feels like you can only pick two. But with the introduction of Viltrox's second L-mount lens, the AF 28mm f/4.5 L, we might have just found a recipe that genuinely delivers on all three fronts by making the compromise elsewhere: a fixed, slower aperture. In this article, I will be putting this tiny lens to the test to see if it actually holds up its end of the bargain—translating a spec sheet into real-world performance.

Should The Camera Industry Make a Left-Handed Camera?

Roughly 10% of the global population is left-handed. That is approximately 800 million people. In almost every industry that manufactures hand-operated tools, those 800 million people can buy a product designed for them. In the camera industry, they cannot.

These Five Tips Apply to More Than Travel Photography

I'm always curious to see what accomplished photographers use as their "rules of thumb" or "best practices." This video offers five tips to improve anyone's travel photography, including one I wish I'd heard before my recent trip. 

Gear Doesn’t Matter. Yes it Does

Trying different genres of photography can be both challenging and rewarding, especially when you either feel like a change or when the seasons force your hand. But have you ever considered infrared?

Understanding ICM, Part Three: Legitimacy

The deficit of trust in ICM stems from an underdeveloped language of results. While we can describe how to move the camera, we lack the criteria to evaluate what has emerged. This final part addresses the legitimacy of formal photographic practice in a culture dominated by "image-as-statement" and examines why beauty, without a named visual task, is so easily reduced to a gimmick.

How I Photographed a France Football Cover in Mexico

What photographing Jennifer Hermoso taught me about editorial photography, trust, and why magazine covers still matter.

Magazine covers still matter.

That may sound almost old-fashioned in a time dominated by feeds, algorithms, and endlessly scrolling images that disappear seconds after being seen. Yet the magazine cover remains a strange exception. It still carries weight, it still feels curated rather than accidental, and perhaps most importantly, it still says something about the image selected to represent an entire story.

Aftershoot Just Became an Entire AI Photography Workflow

AI software for photographers is getting so good that it is both incredible and a little horrifying. Every few months, a new app claims it can save us time, but most of them still only handle one piece of the job. Aftershoot’s newest update feels different.

How to Set Up Back-Button Focus (And Why So Many Pros Swear by It)

Almost every camera you have ever used works the same way out of the box: press the shutter button halfway to focus, press it all the way to take the photo. One button, two jobs. It is so intuitive that most photographers never question it. You half-press, the camera focuses, you press the rest of the way, the shutter fires. Simple.