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Alex Cooke

Cleveland, OH
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Articles from Alex Cooke

11 Things Photographers Say vs. What They Actually Mean

Photography has its own language. Not the technical kind (though that exists too, and nobody outside the profession knows what "expose to the right" means). This is the diplomatic kind. The professional euphemisms we deploy to navigate awkward situations, avoid confrontation, and preserve client relationships while internally screaming at a volume that would alarm nearby wildlife.

Four Mistakes That Make Your Film Photos Look Amateur

Shooting film for a decade gives you a clear view of what separates a polished image from one that looks like it came from a beginner. The culprit is almost never the camera or the film stock itself; it's a handful of repeatable mistakes that are completely fixable once you know what to look for.

Handholding a Telephoto Lens Wrong Is Costing You Sharp Wildlife Shots

Handholding a long telephoto lens is one of the fastest ways to come home with a memory card full of soft, blurry shots. Even small movements get amplified at long focal lengths, and if your technique is off, no amount of image stabilization will fully bail you out.

What Happens to Your Photos When You Die and What to Do About It Now

Most photographers spend years building an archive worth protecting, but very few have a plan for what happens to it after they die. Copyright, physical media, cloud accounts, and stock licensing don't sort themselves out automatically, and without a plan, decades of work can vanish or get tied up in legal chaos.

The Case for Slowing Down in Landscape Photography

Landscape photography has an intimidating reputation, built up by an industry of tutorials, workshops, books, and courses that treat it like a discipline requiring years of study. But this video makes a compelling case that most of that complexity is noise.

The 3-Step System for Accurate Interior Real Estate Colors

Getting white balance right in real estate interiors is harder than it looks. Competing light sources, colored walls, and reflective surfaces all pull your colors in different directions, and fixing it all globally in post rarely works.

5 Low Light Mistakes That Are Costing You Image Quality

Shooting in low light is one of the most technically demanding situations in photography, and a handful of bad habits can quietly ruin your results before you ever open an editing program. Most of these mistakes are easy to fix once you know what to look for.

How Contrast in Shape and Texture Can Replace Perfect Light

Shooting in bad light isn't a death sentence for your images. In fact, some of the strongest nature photographs come from conditions most people walk away from. Knowing how to read light, use contrast, and process with intention separates images that resonate from ones that just document a place.

How to Find and Frame Epic Sunset Light Before It Happens

Great light isn't random. After 15 years of landscape photography, William Patino makes the case that almost none of his best work has come down to luck. It comes down to reading the sky, understanding cloud behavior, and knowing exactly what to do once conditions start to break your way.

How Layers of Light Create Depth in Any Photo

Flat photos usually come down to one thing: no sense of depth. Understanding how to build layers into your compositions is one of those skills that quietly separates the work of consistently compelling photographers from everyone else.

10 Photography Clients Every Photographer Has Had

If you've been shooting professionally for more than a year, you've met all of these people. They aren't bad people. Most of them are perfectly lovely humans who simply have no frame of reference for how professional photography works, what it costs, or why you keep making that face when they ask for "just a few small changes." 

Lightroom Has a Surprising Fix for Lens Flare

Lens flare is one of those problems that can ruin an otherwise great shot, and the usual fixes in Lightroom take time and skill. A trick circulating in the landscape photography community suggests using Lightroom's reflection removal tool, originally designed for shooting through glass, to clean up lens flares instead. 

In Good Weather, Pick a Bad Camera

Fog, rain, and low light are the conditions most people pack away their cameras for. This photographer shoots in exactly those conditions on purpose, and the reasoning is worth understanding.

This Photographer Spent Two Hours in One Spot and Kept Finding New Images

Fog, muted tones, and a dull day at Hickling Broad Nature Reserve on the Norfolk Broads make for some of the most compelling images in this video, and that's exactly the point. The difference between a snapshot and a photograph comes down to one thing: how much time and thought you put into making it.

13 Photographer Personality Types You Meet at Every Shoot

Spend enough time around other photographers and you start noticing patterns. Not in their work, but in their behavior. The same archetypes show up at every wedding, every event, every multi-photographer commercial job, and every workshop. You'll recognize most of them immediately. You'll probably recognize yourself in at least one, and if you don't, you're in denial. Here are the thirteen photographer personality types that exist at every shoot, identified for science.

The 7 Sharpest 50mm Lenses You Can Actually Buy Right Now

50mm remains the most popular prime focal length for a reason: it sits in a natural middle ground, neither compressing like a telephoto nor distorting like a wide angle, which makes it the lens many reach for first. Christopher Frost has now tested over 70 different 50mm lenses, and with a wave of new options hitting the market, his original ranking needed a serious update.

Three Cameras Under $1,500: Which One Is Actually Worth It?

Finding a capable camera for under $1,500 on the used market is completely realistic right now, but the right choice depends entirely on what you're shooting. The gap between a dedicated photo camera, a video workhorse, and a true hybrid is wide enough that picking the wrong one is an expensive mistake.

DxO PureRAW 6 Is the Strongest Version Yet — Here's What's New and How to Use It

Raw files straight out of your camera carry noise, chromatic aberration, and lens imperfections that will follow your image through every step of post-processing. Running your files through a dedicated pre-processor before you ever open Lightroom gives you a cleaner foundation to work from, and the results compound as you edit.

Lighting Demo Reveals What 6 Different Modifiers Actually Do to a Subject

Lighting modifiers can make or break a photo, but most people learn about them by reading descriptions instead of seeing them work in real time. Watching how light wraps, falls off, and creates dimension on an actual three-dimensional subject is a faster path to understanding than any chart or spec sheet.

10 Unwritten Rules of Photography That Nobody Teaches You

Photography education has a blind spot. Workshops teach you exposure. YouTube teaches you composition. College teaches you history. But nobody sits you down and explains the professional norms that separate working photographers from talented hobbyists who can't figure out why clients aren't coming back. These aren't technical skills. They're behavioral patterns, the kind of knowledge that usually arrives the hard way, after a mistake you can't undo. Here are ten of them, collected so you don't have to learn each one at your own expense.

Three Personal Branding Looks from One Light: Here's How It Works

Shooting personal branding with a single light sounds limiting until you see what Lindsay Adler does with one modifier, a few small adjustments, and a corner of the room. The gap between a dramatic, shadow-heavy portrait and a soft, glowing high-key image can come down to nothing more than removing a grid and pointing a light at the ceiling.

Five Photography Myths That Are Quietly Limiting Your Portrait Work

Shooting portraits only during golden hour with an 85mm lens sounds like solid advice until you realize it's quietly limiting what you're capable of creating. This video breaks down five of the most common portrait photography myths and explains what to do differently.

The Real Reason Wedding Photography Feels So Overwhelming

Wedding photography stress is mostly optional. That might sound like a bold claim, but this video makes a compelling case that the overwhelming feeling most people associate with shooting weddings comes from gaps in preparation, not the job itself.

10 Things Non-Photographers Say That Drive Us Crazy

Every photographer carries two things at all times: a camera and a mental catalog of phrases that make their eye twitch. These aren't insults. They're worse. They're delivered with complete sincerity by perfectly nice people who have no idea they've just committed a felony against your entire profession. What follows is a support group meeting in article form.

How to Photograph a Wedding From Start to Finish

Shooting your first wedding is one of the highest-stakes situations you'll face with a camera in your hands. There's no second take on the kiss, no reshooting the vows, and no recovering a moment you missed because you didn't know it was coming.

Why APS-C Cameras Beat Full Frame on More Than Just Price

The case for buying an APS-C camera over a full frame one has never been stronger. Recent advances in sensor technology, AI-powered noise reduction, and a new generation of fast glass have quietly closed the gap that once made full frame the obvious choice for serious work.

ISO 100 Is Holding Back Your Wildlife and Landscape Shots

Keeping your ISO at 100 sounds responsible, but it may be costing you sharp, usable shots. This video argues that treating ISO as a strict limit rather than a flexible tool leads to sacrificed shutter speed, compromised stability, and missed moments.

Point Color in Photoshop Is the Color Tool You've Been Ignoring

Photoshop has more color-grading tools than most people ever use, and picking the wrong one costs you time and control. Point Color, tucked inside Camera Raw, gives you precision that the standard Hue/Saturation adjustment simply can't match.