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Alex Cooke

Cleveland, OH
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Articles from Alex Cooke

A Mistake Almost Every New Photographer Makes

Here's a scenario most photographers will recognize: you come home from a portrait session or family event with 800 frames on your memory card, feeling like you absolutely nailed it. Three hours of culling later, you've exported maybe 15 images worth keeping. The math on that works out to under 2%, which isn't a success rate so much as it is a coin flip repeated until something lands.

How to Start Lightroom Classic the Right Way in 2026

Adobe Lightroom Classic still scares people off in 2026, mostly because the first 10 minutes feel like a wall of buttons and empty panels. If you shoot a lot, you need a setup that keeps files predictable and edits reversible, not a messy pile of “final_final_2” exports.

If You Only Bring One Prime: 50mm or 85mm?

A 50mm and an 85mm can both make strong portraits, but they push you into different decisions the moment you pick one. This video puts the Viltrox AF 50mm f/1.4 Pro FE and Viltrox AF 85mm f/1.4 Pro FE in the same real location so you can see what changes when you use both.

Rain, Fog, Snow: 12 Photos That Prove the Plan Is Optional

You can spend a whole year chasing the next trip and still miss what actually moved your work forward. This recap is built around that tension: the gear and locations change, but the real lesson is how you respond when the day refuses to match the plan.

Why Instagram Doesn’t Reward Effort Anymore

Instagram is changing what “good” looks like, and it’s not the kind of change you can fix with a new lens or cleaner color. If you keep posting work that looks polished and still get silence, this video lays out a reason that’s hard to ignore.

The Biggest Photography Stories of January 2026

January opens the year with CES and closes before the spring photography-focused trade shows like CP+ and NAB. It is often treated as a transitional month, but 2026 proved anything but routine. Between major gear launches, regulatory crackdowns on AI tools, a prestigious engineering award for the inventor behind every camera sensor on the planet, and the continued evolution of what photographers and audiences consider "authentic," the first month of 2026 delivered stories that will shape the industry for the rest of the year. Here are the ten developments that mattered most.

Fstoppers Photographer of the Month (January 2026): Christopher Doelman

The Fstoppers community is brimming with creative vision and talent. Every day, we comb through your work, looking for images to feature as the Photo of the Day or simply to admire your creativity and technical prowess. In 2026, we're featuring a new photographer every month, whose portfolio represents both stellar photographic achievement and a high level of involvement within the Fstoppers community.

Stop Waiting for the “Right” Camera and Start Getting Better Results

Lightroom Classic can either become the place where your landscape work stays alive for years, or the thing you install after you have already lost track of it. The video lays out a few mistakes that feel small in the moment, then show up later as missing files, wasted trips, and slow progress.

Eye Bag Removal in Photoshop That Still Looks Real at 100%

Dark under-eye bags can wreck an otherwise strong portrait, and heavy-handed fixes usually leave that telltale “plastic” skin. In this video, the focus is removing extreme eye bags in Photoshop while keeping texture believable at 100%.

The "Fun Camera" Effect: Why People Buy Worse Cameras

There's a particular kind of cognitive dissonance that happens when you spend months researching dynamic range charts, reading MTF curves, and comparing autofocus systems, only to find yourself genuinely excited about a plastic camera with a 1.6-megapixel sensor that hangs from your keychain. I've spent years writing about camera technology for this site, dissecting the differences between sensors and explaining why certain lenses outperform others. And yet, some of the most enjoyable photography I've done recently has been with cameras that would make any spec-sheet enthusiast wince.

AI Images That Look Real: What Happens to Your Photography Next?

AI image generators are making images that look like photographs, and it’s pushing you to ask what part of your work is skill, taste, or just access to a tool like Photoshop. That question hits even harder when a prompt can produce something that passes at a glance, whether it’s going on your website, a client deck, or a social feed.

Two Useful New Adjustment Layers for Photoshop Users

Photoshop just added two adjustment layers that used to force a detour through Camera Raw: “Clarity and Dehaze” and “Grain.” If you edit photos and rely on selective control, the shift is that these effects now live where masks, stacking, and quick revisions are already part of your daily flow.

The Tamron 25-200mm f/2.8-5.6 G2: The Superzoom Lens for You?

A do-it-all zoom sounds like freedom until you hit the usual traps: soft corners, jittery focus, and a slow aperture right when you need light. The video takes the Tamron 25-200mm f/2.8-5.6 Di III VXD G2 into an actual portrait shoot and treats it like a real tool, not a spec sheet.

Mechanical Shutter vs. Electronic Shutter: When Each Wins

The photography internet loves a good "this technology is dead" narrative, and mechanical shutters have been on the chopping block for years. Every time a manufacturer announces a new mirrorless body with blazing electronic shutter speeds, someone declares that physical shutter curtains are finally obsolete. The reality is considerably more interesting. Both shutter types remain genuinely useful tools, each with scenarios where it clearly outperforms the other. Understanding when to reach for each option will make you a more capable photographer than simply leaving your camera on its default mode.

Photoshop 27.3.0 Is Here: The Upgrades You’ll Actually Notice

Photoshop 27.3.0 just dropped, and it targets the exact spots where edits bog down: local contrast tweaks, expansion quality, and cleanup around faces. If you do any real retouching work, this update changes what you can trust inside one PSD without detouring into other dialogs.

Tripod-Free Focus Stacking in Photoshop: Real Limits, Real Results

You can get a sharp foreground and a sharp horizon without living at f/16, and without turning your hike into a tripod march. This video shows how focus stacking in Photoshop can clean up the usual weak spot in wide landscape shots, the near stuff that never lands in focus.

The Precision Myth: A Photographer's Guide to Bit Depth

You've captured what you believe is the perfect sunset. The light was extraordinary, your composition was deliberate, and the histogram looked pristine. You import the file into Lightroom or Photoshop, apply a standard S-curve to add some contrast, and suddenly your beautiful sky transforms from a smooth gradient into something resembling a topographic map. Instead of that seamless transition from warm orange to deep blue, you're looking at a series of ugly, jagged steps. What happened?

The Simple Lightroom Steps That Make a Subject Pop

Lightroom can make a flat landscape feel like it has a clear subject, but only if you control where the light goes. This video shows how simple masks can push attention without turning the edit into a fake-looking mess.

How To Take Control Of Your Edits With Lightroom Classic Masks

If you use Lightroom Classic, masking is the line between “good enough” and an edit that looks intentional. This video focuses on the masking tools that let you target light, color, and texture without pushing the whole frame in the same direction.

Second Shooting vs. Lead Shooter: The Pay, The Stress, The Truth

A wedding job can look like a Saturday with a camera, until someone vanishes and couples are left staring at a calendar with no plan. The video takes that nightmare scenario and turns it into a blunt checklist for how you avoid becoming the person everyone warns about.

Will Sony Ever Make a Retro Camera?

Fujifilm has built an empire on it. Nikon proved it works at full frame. Canon is openly entertaining the idea, with an AE-1 tribute rumored for this year. And Sony, the company that defined modern mirrorless photography, is nowhere to be found.

Sony a1 II Long-Term Review: What $7,000 Really Gets You After Months of Use

You’re probably eyeing the Sony a1 II because you want one body that can handle sports, wildlife, portraits, and serious video without feeling like a compromise. The catch is that it’s priced like a long-term decision, so small differences in handling, tracking, and video tools turn into real wins or real regret.

Tamron 25-200mm f/2.8-5.6 G2: The Real Tradeoffs of a One-Lens Setup

A single-lens travel setup sounds simple until you try to cover 25mm through 200mm without hating the compromises. The Tamron 25-200mm f/2.8-5.6 Di III VXD G2 aims straight at that problem, and the details in this review land right where your real-world shooting gets messy.

The Hidden Reason Your Landscape Photos Feel Busy and Flat

Standing in front of a landscape that feels unreal can make your brain short-circuit, and your photos often show it. This video breaks down a method for getting past that frozen, everything-is-important feeling without turning the moment into a checklist.