A Practical Guide to Packing Cameras, Clothes, and Backups for Travel

Packing for out-of-state weddings is where travel logistics and paying clients collide, and sloppy planning can cost real money. When your cameras, clothes, and backup gear all have to survive flights, hotels, and wedding timelines, a solid packing system lets you focus on shooting instead of babysitting bags.

5 Weather Conditions Pros Hunt For (And How to Use Them)

Ask a non-photographer about their ideal shooting conditions, and they'll probably describe a clear, sunny day with blue skies. Ask a professional, and you'll get a very different answer. The photographers whose work stops you mid-scroll on Instagram aren't waiting for perfect weather. They're actively hunting for the atmospheric conditions that most people hide from.

Active Contests
7 258

Enter your Best "Dark" or "Low-Key" images

Welcome to the April 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 most "dark" or "low key" photographs.

Sony RX1R III Review: 10,000 Photos and the Truth About This $5,000 Compact Camera

After spending a week with the Sony RX1R III and capturing nearly 10,000 frames, I feel like I’ve truly gotten to know what this little full frame compact can do. From photographing my family to shooting three portrait sessions and a full documentary project, I pushed this camera in real-world scenarios. But the question remains: Is it really worth $5,000?

We Review The Peak Design Roller Pro - The Ultimate Travel Roller?

Peak Design has become a staple among photographers for camera bags and accessories, and they have now expanded their line with the Roller Pro and the XL Camera Packing Cube, a carry-on style bag meant for both travel and work. But is it the best of both worlds or does it fall short in each? We put it to the test through travel and work alike to see where it excels and where it could be better.

The Simple Masking Workflow That Makes Sunrise Pop

Color grading can turn a flat sunrise into a scene with shape, depth, and energy. If you shoot high-contrast landscapes, nailing tones in the sky and keeping detail in the foreground is where Lightroom’s tools earn their keep.

5 Legendary Lenses That Desperately Need a Modern Remake

In the relentless march toward clinical sharpness and autofocus perfection, camera manufacturers have left behind some truly special lenses. These weren't always the sharpest or the fastest focusing optics ever made, but they possessed something increasingly rare in modern lens design: character. While today's lenses are technical marvels that can resolve every eyelash at f/1.4, some of us still dream about the unique rendering, specialized capabilities, and creative possibilities that these discontinued classics offered. Here are five lenses that manufacturers absolutely need to resurrect for the modern era.

5 Common Beginner Portrait Photography Mistakes

We all want those stunning portraits, but what subtle errors are creeping into your shots and holding back your potential? Let’s see the five most common blunders in portrait photography and how to elevate your work instantly.

Turn Your Nikon Zf Into A Film-Like JPEG Machine

The new Nikon Zf firmware update quietly turns a familiar camera into a stronger everyday tool, especially if you chase a film look without giving up digital speed. If you want JPEGs that feel intentional straight out of camera instead of plastic and cold, this one deserves attention.

Photoshop’s New AI Credits: What You Need To Use And What To Skip

Adobe just made Photoshop’s AI tools more powerful and more expensive, and if you shoot real estate, these changes hit your workflow, your margins, and your client expectations. The mix of free tools, standard generative credits, and new premium credits now forces you to choose where speed and polish justify extra cost instead of treating AI as unlimited magic.

Can You Be a Photographer If You’re Colorblind?

“Why does that dog look green?” From that startling comment, my parents discovered that I was red-green colorblind. But is it possible to be a colorblind photographer? We examine this interesting dilemma.

Why Your First Waterfall Composition Is Usually Wrong

Shooting waterfalls in dramatic conditions forces you to think beyond the postcard shot and make deliberate decisions about space, timing, and tension in the frame. You see quickly that composition, focal length choices, and the weather you usually curse are what separate generic images from work that actually holds attention.

5 Point-and-Shoot Cameras That Are Just Plain Fun to Shoot

Photography shouldn't feel like work. Somewhere between megapixel counts and autofocus point comparisons, we've forgotten that cameras can simply be enjoyable to use. These five cameras, from vintage film classics to quirky modern experiments, prove that the best gear isn't always the most capable or the most expensive. Sometimes it's just the camera that makes you smile every time you pick it up.

A Budget Camera So Good, I Bought One Myself

There are not many entry-level cameras left in the current camera economy. Many manufacturers aren't even offering budget options anymore, but thankfully, even with narrowing options, there is one standout choice.

A Look at the Fujfilm GFX100RF Medium Format Digital Camera

A compact fixed-lens medium format body with a true 102 MP sensor suddenly makes ultra-detailed work portable in a way your usual kit cannot match. If you care about resolution, flexible cropping, and keeping your bag lean without giving up dynamic range, this camera hits directly at the way you shoot on real trips.

Five Hidden Bird Photo Mistakes Quietly Ruining Your Best Shots

Bird images fall apart in quiet ways: lazy planning, slow reactions, and small habits that sneak softness and clutter into your frame. If you keep coming home with flat, lifeless files while others seem to nail crisp, intimate shots, these five recurring mistakes are likely right in front of you.

Top 10 Questions With Tamara Lackey: Finding Your Voice and Shooting With Purpose

Tamara Lackey, Nikon USA Ambassador, book author, PBS show host, and philanthropist, has used photography to establish Beautiful Together refuges for children and animals in need in Ethiopia and North Carolina. Here she weighs in on finding your voice, overcoming creative block, and camera bag essentials (don’t forget the candy).

How to Cut Your Editing Time in Half

You spend hours dragging sliders when you would rather be out shooting. Cutting that processing time in half starts at the moment you press the shutter. Treating capture as a deliberate commitment instead of a casual tap changes how consistent your files are and how long you stay stuck at the computer.