Hands-On Impressions of Lomography’s Lomo MC-A 35mm Film Camera
Lomography recently announced its newest camera, the Lomo MC-A, and it raised a bit of a ruckus. It’s an entirely new point-and-shoot camera with some fascinating features and promising ideas. On Friday, I got the chance to handle one of the prototypes at the Lomography office in DUMBO (“Down Under the Manhattan Bridge Overpass” for non-New Yorkers), and I have to say, I really liked what I saw.
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A Remarkably Affordable 85mm Portrait Lens
An 85mm prime is still the classic way to get flattering portraits on a full frame body, and the latest option from Viltrox tries to give you that look without the usual bulk or price. If you want a compact lens that still feels serious in the hand, this release deserves your attention.
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The Leica M10 Monochrom: Why Locking Into Black And White Might Actually Help
The Leica M10 Monochrom locks you into black and white the moment you turn it on, with no safety net of color files to fall back on. That single constraint forces you to look harder at light, contrast, and shape instead of thinking about what preset you will use later.
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How To Plan a Confident Client Photo Shoot From First Idea to Final Schedule
Turning a paid shoot from guesswork into a clear, repeatable process is what actually makes you look professional to clients. If you want to stop winging every session and start leading shoots with calm confidence, this video walks through a planning workflow that keeps every step under control.
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How To Shoot Wide Angle Shots In Cities And Town
Photo by Joshua Waller
Take a short walk through your town and you'll find a thousand and one things to photograph but instead of walking around for hours photographing trees, postboxes and buildings one at a time try getting your wide-angle lens out to capture and emphasise a wider area of the town.
A lens which is 18mm or wider is a good choice if you're working with a camera that isn't full-frame. If you want to have the option of changing your focal length take along a zoom lens which will give you the option of shooting a variety of perspectives.
As your foreground objects will be quite close to your lens the smallest movement from your camera can make a huge difference to your photo so take a tripod out with you. You may also have trouble with lens flare so pack a lens hood and take a lint-free cloth to wipe away any spots on your lens.
The problem with wide-angle lenses is that objects can appear small so it's easy for your shots to look empty. Or, if there are lots of objects filling the scene your photo will look overly busy and the viewer won't have anything to focus on. The best way to deal with this is to have foreground interest that will give your image scale and also give you a focus point.
If you want to use this technique to its full potential, to give your image as much impact as possible, you need to get as close as you can to your foreground object.
Photo by Joshua Waller
Look out for objects you can use to lead the eye through the image as long paths and roads give the impression they stretch on for miles when shot with a wide angle lens which pulls the viewer right through the photo. Just watch out for unwanted items such as your own shadow creeping into the shot.
You need to have the eye-catching foreground interest filling enough of the frame while still retaining enough background detail to make the photograph interesting. To do this, you'll need to make sure everything from front to back is sharp. A small aperture is a good place to start. Don't be tempted to focus on your foreground interest as this will leave too much of your foreground in focus and not enough background detail will be sharp. Instead, focus just beyond what's in your foreground, around a third in, or if you can, use the hyperfocal focus point.
If there's nothing of real interest in your foreground get down low to the ground and just emphasise the scale of the entire scene. If you have a few clouds in the sky they will streak out around your scene and as they curve towards the edge of the frame, it gives them a sense of motion which can add interest to your shot.
ePHOTOzine Daily Theme Winners Week 4 October 2025
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The latest winner of our popular daily photography theme which takes place in our forums have been chosen and congratulations go to MalcolmM (Day 30 - Winter Weather)
Daily Theme Runners-Up
If you didn't win this time, keep uploading your images to the daily competition forum for another chance to win! If you're new to the Daily Theme, you can find out more about it in the Daily Theme Q&A.
Well done to our latest runners-up, too, whose images you can take a look at below.
Day 25Light Trails
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Day 26Busy Places
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Day 27
Graveyards
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Day 28
Creative Distortion
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Day 29City Twilight Shots
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Day 31
Halloween
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You’ll find the Daily Themes, along with other great photo competitions, over in our Forum. Take a look to see the latest daily photo contests. Open to all levels of photographer, you’re sure to find a photography competition to enter. Why not share details of competitions with our community? Join the camaraderie and upload an image to our Gallery.
Zoner Studio Software Review (Autumn/Fall update 2025)
Zoner Studio has a new name and a new look, and it’s fitting that its first update brings along some powerful features to speed up workflow. For more details of the Autumn/Fall 2025 update, click here. You can organise, sort, label and delete images speedily and easily in the Manager module, and processing is just as quick when editing with the ability to work in batches with a few clicks and utilise AI-powered tools.
Zoner Studio is a subscription-based software for Windows 10 and 11 with the guarantee of two major updates a year, so there’s the prospect of new features and tools every six months. Within the software, you can back up to the cloud, print and upload images to the Zonerama online gallery which comes as part of the subscription package. Finally, Zoner Studio is a video editing solution with no extra software or plug-in required.
With such an impressive array of skills, join us for a closer look at Zoner Studio’s Autumn/Fall 2025 update. If it looks like a software you want to try, then you can and it’s free for seven days. Click here to take you to the Zoner Studio download page; no credit card required.
Zoner Studio has a modular approach to workflow. This is the Manager module where you can have all the shots showing or folders which makes moving images around easy.
Quick Verdict
Zoner Studio is a powerful image editor available on subscription. If you’re a Windows user needing a great value software with amazing AI workflow and editing skills, as well as the ability to edit video, Zoner Studio is worth a serious look and, very importantly, it will save you money compared with Adobe products. It is a modular workflow software with page tabs for Manager, Develop, Editor, Print and Video that is easy to learn and shortcut keys can speed editing up further.
Try Zoner Studio for yourself and download a fully functional version here and you can enjoy its talents free for seven days.
+ Pros
- Individual membership $5.99 a month, $59 a year
- Windows 10 and 11 support
- Zonerama Online Photo Gallery with unlimited space for your photos and video
- Family plan for two or more people $9.98 a month, $98 a year
- Updated Spring and Autumn
- Compatible with most Raw formats including Fujifilm X-Trans CMOS sensors
- Full workflow software using AI
- AI masks, resizing
- Supports 4k resolution
- Supports pressure sensitive drawing tablets
- Integrated colour management
- Speedy image editing with AI tools and presets
- Fully compatible with HDR monitors
- Complete set of output options
- Good for video editing
- Click here for full details of the latest update
-
Subscription only
-
Windows only, no Mac option
Zoner Studio is a subscription-based software with two major updates each year. For individuals, it’s priced at $5.99 a month or $59 for a year. The price includes free updates and new tools twice a year, 20GB of free storage, 15 free photo prints and a Zonerama Premium account. There’s also the option of a Family Plan at $9.98 a month or $98 a year, which is a great value for two or more people in your household. Each person gets their own account plus all the benefits of the individual licence. It is for Windows 10 and 11 and is compatible with an extensive range of Raw camera formats including files from Fujifilm X-Trans CMOS sensors.
To see our previous reviews, click here for the Spring 2025 update and here for the Autumn 2024 review. For a free, fully-functional seven-day trial of Zoner Studio, click here.
Zoner Studio Autumn/Fall 2025 update highlights
A smooth, efficient workflow is essential for today’s image maker particularly with cameras that can shoot continuous bursts at 20, 30, 50 and even 120 frames every second. Obviously, much depends on the subject but in an afternoon you could end up with several thousand shots to work through.
AI Close-ups in the Zoner Studio Autumn/Fall is a big feature that will definitely be much used by prolific shooters. AI Close-ups has magnification and subject options which are Faces, People, Animals, Birds, Vehicles and Airplanes. The software automatically zooms into the detected subject, and you can just rate the photographs using the magnified image that you want to keep for further editing.
A1 Close-ups is one of the headline features in the Zoner Studio Autumn/Fall update.
Here are the subject and magnification options in the AI Close-ups menu.
AI Resize has the ability to enlarge smaller, cropped files without image quality suffering. There are two resizing options. AI Resize (reconstructive interpolation) is for smaller enlargements and is performed through the Export, Edit or Batch Filter menus. This method is quick because no new content is generated but its working range is limited to about double the size of the original image.
AI Resize Generative is designed to produce bigger images with minimal quality loss and this is done through the Edit menu. As its name tells you, AI is used to fill in missing details or determine what’s hidden in blurred areas and smooth things out. AI doesn’t just stretch the image to make it bigger but enhances its content for a quality result, so it takes several seconds.
AI Resize (reconstructive interpolation) enlarges photos without creating new detail so it’s quick and ideal for batch processing.
AI Resize Generative can help you recover quality as well as give a much larger print size. from severely cropped images.
New features of Zoner Studio Autumn / Fall 2025 update
- AI Close-ups – find your best shot quickly. Detect animals, vehicles, people, faces, and aircraft
- New AI resize methods – Reconstructive Interpolation perfect for everyday photos and batch imports
- Generative – fills in missing details, suitable for major resizing (4x or more)
- Improved Split view with a slider
- Improved photo books – drag and drop, filmstrip
- Two video updates – smooth audio cuts
- Improved retouching tools, faster and natural results
- New crop tools - diagonal, triangles, golden spiral aids
- Faster selections
- Improved export
- Simpler editing
Zoner Studio: Ease Of Use & Performance
Finding your way around Zoner Studio is straightforward thanks largely to the five module concept which has self-explanatory tabs for Manager, Develop, Editor, Print and Video. That said, this is a very powerful workflow software and digging deeper into its treasure chest of tools and features will take time as will learning and remembering quick keys.
The AI Close-ups feature worked quickly even though I was working with 45 megapixel Raws from a Canon EOS R5 Mark II. The previews would appear sharp enough to assess even though the Processing icon was still showing. With a sequence of portraits, Zoner Studio would usually magnify the face, which really sped up the workflow, but on the odd occasion a different part of the image was highlighted. Also, in my stag portrait, the software picked the base of its antlers where I would have expected the AI to pick up on the nearby eye. However, in both instances, it wasn’t a problem to move the image so that the face or eye showed. The key thing, though, was that Zoner Studio made it quick process to go through large number of shots and identify the keepers.
AI Close-ups works very quickly and in this sequence of shots featuring an airplane coming into land, Zoner Studio picked the right area to show.
For some reason, AI Close-ups picked out four facial close-ups perfectly but slipped up on the fifth, even though the composition of the five images was the same.
In this sequence of shots of a stag, AI Close-up picked out the base of the antler to focus on when you would have expected the software to latch onto the eye.
After AI Close-up, the next big feature, the Zoner Studio Autumn / Fall update was its two resizing skills, AI Resize Reconstructive Interpolation and AI Resize Generative.
I tested AI Reconstructive Interpolation starting with a full-size 50 megapixel Raw from a Sony A1 II. The original 8640x5760 pixel file of a heron enjoying its fish supper was cropped down to just 2687x1734 pixels then, using AI Reconstructive Interpolation took a few seconds to resize it to 5269x3400pixels.
The original Raw file was captured with a Sony A1 II fitted with a FE 400-800mm lens and opened up to an image of 8640x5760pixels. Image: Will Cheung.
Cropped in Zoner Studio resulted in an image measuring 2687x1734 pixels and this was resized using AI Reconstructive Interpolation to 5269x3400 pixels.
Close-up of the 2687x1734 pixels image
Close up of the image after AI Reconstructive Interpolation to 5269x3400 pixels
Moving on to AI Resize Generative I started with an image of a starling. This was taken on a Sony A1 II with a FE 400-800mm zoom lens. It was shot at the very high ISO of 5000 and the image was not treated to any denoising. The original was 8640x5760pixels before being cropped to a small image of just 1924x1276pixels. This image was then resized back to close to its original size using AI Resize Generative. For comparison’s sake I repeated the process with AI Reconstructive Interpolation.
This image of starling was cropped down from 8640x5760pixels to just 1924x1276pixels.
Taking the 1924x1276pixels image, I resized it to 8732x5820pixels using Zoner’s AI Reconstructive Interpolation function and then repeated the process to the same size using AI Resize Generative and this is the resulting image.
Taking a highly magnified look at the feather detail of the two starling shots. On the left is the AI Reconstructive Interpolation compared with AI Resize Generative on the right. The extra detail and clarity of the AI Resize Generative version is clear.
Value for Money
Zoner Studio is available on subscription at $5.99 per month or $59 annually plus there’s the Family Pack option. Either way, subscribing to Zoner Studio is cheaper than taking on Adobe Photoshop or Lightroom. It is worth celebrating the fact that Zoner Studio has held its price. We rated the software highly on value for money in 2024, and the fact that it’s the same price in late 2025 with so many improvements makes its great value for money.
Zoner Studio is available on subscription and that might put some people off, but subscriptions are part and parcel of modern life, whether we like them or not. In the case of Zoner Studio’s monthly fee of $5.99, this is less than the cost of an average bottle of wine and probably more rewarding and you get two big updates a year.
Go for an annual subscription and at the end of the licence period, there is a one month grace period to give you time to extend the licence and even when the licence period has ended, you can still export photos and view images.
Zoner Studio Verdict
With its updated branding and new name, Zoner Studio has already had a big year and the Autumn / Fall update certainly sees out 2025 in style.
AI Close-ups is a big feature that speeds up the process of wading through hundreds of pictures to pick out your best shots, and the fact that it works for a wide range of subjects makes it even more useful.
Zoner Studio’s new resizing skills may not be so significant but the benefits are clear and if you need to resize files from tightly cropped images, the feature is on hand and it works well.
With these new skills added to its already extensive selection of image and video editing skills, you can’t really quibble about the cost of Zoner Studio and you get it all for $5.99 a month or $59 a year, so value for money rates very highly. Try the free seven-day trial version for yourself here.
Zoner Photo Studio X Pros
- Individual membership $5.99 a month, $59 a year
- Windows 10 and 11 support
- Zonerama Online Photo Gallery with unlimited space for your photos and video
- Family plan for two or more people $9.98 a month, $98 a year
- Updated Spring and Autumn
- Compatible with most Raw formats including Fujifilm X-Trans CMOS sensors
- Full workflow software using AI
- AI masks, resizing
- Supports 4k resolution
- Supports pressure sensitive drawing tablets
- Integrated colour management
- Speedy image editing with AI tools and presets
- Fully compatible with HDR monitors
- Complete set of output options
- Good for video editing
Zoner Photo Studio X Cons
- Subscription only
- Windows only, no Mac option
[REVIEW_FOOTER]R_features=4.5|R_handling=4|R_performance=4.5|R_value=5|R_overall=4.5|A_level=4.5|E_id=8016[/REVIEW_FOOTER]
Beyond Social Media: The Three-Pillar Strategy for Building a Sustainable Local Photography Business
If you're tired of the endless hamster wheel of Instagram reels, TikTok trends, and algorithm changes that seem designed to make you fail, you're not alone. Social media has become an exhausting game that burns through time without delivering consistent bookings. The truth is, while social platforms can be useful tools, they should never be the foundation of your business. The most successful photographers I know have built their client base on three timeless pillars that actually work: local SEO, vendor relationships, and strategic community presence.
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The Greatest Marketing Strategy Photographers Are Ignoring: Ethics
Let’s cut the fluff! If you’re relying solely on social media trends, aesthetic reels, or gifting your clients cupcakes to stay top-of-mind, you’re missing the long game. In an industry drowning in performative marketing, the most powerful and most slept-on strategy is simple: ethics.
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We Review the Baseus PrimeTrip VD1 Pro: Hardwire-Free Parking Protection Dash Cam for Photographers on the Go
As photographers, we have all felt that creeping anxiety when leaving a car full of equipment that’s often worth more than the car itself. Whether it’s a quick stop on the way to a location shoot or leaving our gear in the car parked overnight, the thought of something happening to it is always at the back of our minds. This is where a reliable dash cam with parking monitoring can add an extra layer of peace of mind.
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The Real Difference Between Canon’s R5 and R6 Lineup for Action and Wildlife
Choosing between Canon’s newer R bodies is not a spec-sheet game. It changes how you shoot wildlife, action, and low light work day to day. The way the EOS R5, R5 Mark II, R6 Mark II, and R6 Mark III handle speed, autofocus, and files can either lift your keeper rate or quietly hold you back when things move fast.
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Hard Truths Landscape Shooters Learn Too Late
Landscape photography punishes lazy habits and vague plans. If you want images that stand out among other photographers instead of blending into the scroll, you have to confront some blunt lessons about light, gear, and how much effort you are actually putting in.
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Why This Smaller Fuji Camera Can Compete With Its Bigger Sibling
Choosing between the Fujifilm X-E5 and the Fujifilm X-T5 decides what your everyday shooting actually feels like, from travel snapshots to paid assignments. Both sit in a similar price range and share the same 40.2-megapixel sensor, so the real difference comes from how each body handles in your hands.
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Is the Sony a7R V Too Much Camera or Just Right?
If you are trying to decide whether a 61-megapixel body can carry both your stills and video work, the Sony a7R V mirrorless camera is probably already on your short list. A long-term look at how it survives drops, bad weather, and heavy mixed use is what actually helps working photographers separate hype from a real upgrade, and you'll find it here.
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Photography Tips For A Frosty Morning
Photo by David Pritchard
The most important part about photography at this time of year is – rather obviously, to be prepared for the cold! Warm clothing, preferably layered, and a hat; if you're cold, your mind is more on how cold you are rather than the pictures you're looking for.
Keep yourself (and your batteries) warm!
Remember too, that when you're standing around looking for photographs, you will get colder quicker, so err on the side of too much, rather than too little warm clothing. Your camera battery won't last as long in sub-zero temperatures either, so make sure you have a spare with you, and that they're fully charged. Try keeping the spare in an inside pocket, rather in your camera bag, as your body warmth will keep the charge in the battery for longer.
Rise earlyFrosts are typically better early in the day, often before the sun hits the frost and starts to thaw it; which means a prompt start, but one of the benefits of the winter months, is that at least sunrise is at a more sociable time than in the summer! Head for areas of open space and rolling landscapes, rather than woodland, where the shelter of the trees can prevent frost.
Consider trees, foliage and hedges
Trees and hedges are great subjects for frost of course, but more in isolation. Use your macro lens for close-ups of frost on leaves – both on the tree or lying on the ground - or on cobwebs. Even frost on a barbed wire fence portrays the feeling of a crisp winter morning. Remember too, that a small aperture will give you a greater depth-of-field, to ensure more of your picture remains sharp, but on isolated leaves, try a wider aperture to isolate the leaf against an out-of-focus background.
Photo by David Pritchard
On a really cold day, when even the sun isn't going to thaw the frost too quickly, a touch of sunlight helps to emphasise the sparkle of frost, and especially try shooting into the light to accentuate the glint of the sun on the frost still further, but remember to use a lens hood to minimise the chance of flare on your pictures.
Even photographing in the shade can still show wonderful textures, and remember, temperatures remain lower in the shade – so frost tends to hang about longer. If your subject is in a particularly shady spot, use of a reflector can help to bounce a little daylight into the darker areas. A warm reflector, such as a gold, or sunfire, can also help to reduce the blue cast so common in the shade.
The white of frost can also fool your camera meter, so keep a close eye on your histogram as most cameras still "see" white frost as mid-grey. Possibly an exposure compensation of around +1 stop will keep your frost-laden trees looking pristine white.
Article by John Gravett of Lakeland Photographic Holidays - www.lakelandphotohols.com
The Society of Photographers Unveils the 2026 London Photo Convention - The Biggest Photography Convention of the Year Is Back!
14–17 January 2026 • Novotel London West, Hammersmith
Trade Show 15–17 January – FREE ENTRY
The UK’s most exciting photography Convention is back — bigger, bolder and packed with more inspiration, education and industry powerhouses than ever before.
The 2026 London Photo Convention & Trade Show brings thousands of photographers together under one roof for four days of hands-on learning, live demos, exclusive deals, and world-class speakers. If you’re serious about your photography — this is where you need to be.
FREE Trade Show: 15–17 January — Meet the Biggest Brands in Photography
Get ready for three electric days on the Trade Show floor, with leading camera and lighting brands showcasing their latest kit. Expect:
- Hands-on access to the newest cameras & lenses
- Live demonstrations from top pros
- Expert advice from manufacturers
- Show-only offers and exclusive discounts
- Retailers showcasing must-have accessories
Whether you're upgrading, testing, comparing or just curious — the Trade Show is 100% free to attend and absolutely packed.
Over 200 Hours of Training with Masterclasses & Superclasses
If you're hungry to learn, the Convention’s education programme is unmatched.
Masterclasses
Dive into a huge lineup of practical, inspiring and business-boosting sessions covering:
- Portraits • Weddings • Lighting
- Wildlife • Macro • Post-production
- Creative storytelling • Branding
- Business growth for photographers
Top photographers, award-winning educators and industry leaders share the techniques and insights that elevate your photography fast.
Superclasses
Want hands-on training with the best in the business?
The Superclasses deliver small-group, practical workshops with some of the most respected names in the industry. Limited spaces — these sell out fast every single year.
The Photography Event You Simply Can’t Afford to Miss
If you want to improve your skills, grow your business, network with other creatives and immerse yourself in the world of photography — this is your event.
Join thousands of photographers for the ultimate start to 2026. 14–17 January • London Trade Show FREE Masterclass Passes & Superclasses available now
Affinity Introduced: All-New Professional Design, Now Completely Free
© Affinity
Affinity has unveiled an all-new design app that brings together photo editing, drawing tools, and layout features in one easy-to-use platform. It’s built to be flexible, so you can set up your workspace the way you like, combine different tools, and even share your setup with others. Whether you're editing pictures, creating graphics, or working on documents, everything is now in one smooth and powerful space.
The best part is that Affinity is now completely free. This full-featured design software used to cost money, but now anyone can use it without paying. The update also comes with a fresh new look and marks Affinity’s next step as part of the Canva family, making high-quality creative tools more accessible to everyone.
From Affinity:
When Affinity joined the Canva family last year last year, we made a promise to preserve its power while expanding what’s possible. Today, that vision comes to life with the all-new Affinity: a studio-grade creative app that brings vector, photo, and layout tools together in one high-performance platform. Fully featured. Lightning-fast. And completely free.
For too long, professional designers have had almost no choice in the tools they use, from bloated software that slows them down, to subscriptions that stack up, and workflows that interrupt creativity. Across the creative community, we’ve heard the same frustrations: a call for speed, for power, for freedom. Designers have been asking for the tools they love, so we listened, and we built something better.
A new era for Affinity
For ten years, Affinity has been the tool of choice for professionals who care deeply about craft. Designers who value precision, speed, and control, and who expect their tools to keep up.
Now, that legacy enters a new chapter. The all-new Affinity was built in close collaboration with its community of creators, shaped by thousands of conversations, feature requests, and shared ideas. Guided by Canva’s Designer Advisory Board, this release reflects what professionals told us matters most: performance, reliability, and creative freedom.
From the smallest details to the biggest design systems, every feature has been built with respect for the people who use it.
One app to craft it allThe all new Affinity app brings professional vector, photo, and layout tools together in one powerful space, featuring everything you need to design, edit, and publish without switching apps or breaking flow.
For designers who think in lines, curves, and grids, Affinity’s vector tools deliver precision and speed in perfect balance. Every adjustment happens in real time: paths adjust instantly, shapes snap into place, and even large files pan and zoom smoothly. From comprehensive brand systems to complex illustrations, everything feels responsive and effortless.
Affinity’s award-winning photo editing tools give you the freedom to experiment without limits. Every adjustment, from RAW development to retouching and compositing, is non-destructive, so you can refine endlessly without losing your original work. Plus, GPU acceleration keeps even the most complex files fast and fluid, while intelligent tools like Smart Selections, live filters, and batch processing help speed up repetitive edits.
With Affinity’s layout tools, structure and creativity work side by side. From short brochures to multi-page reports, you can edit images, graphics, and text directly within your document and see every change update live. Smart Master Pages, shared text styles, and advanced typographic controls keep everything consistent while giving you the freedom to experiment.
Whether you’re editing a portrait, building a brand identity, or designing a publication, the all new Affinity keeps you in flow, combining power, precision, and speed in a single studio-grade environment.
Design your workspace, your way
Every designer works differently, and now, Affinity does too. The updated app introduces a new level of personalization with fully customizable studios.
Creatives can mix and match tools from the Vector, Pixel, and Layout studios to build a workspace that fits their unique process. Rearrange panels, choose the tools you need, remove the ones you don’t, and save multiple setups for different projects or tasks. Custom studios can also be shared and downloaded, opening new ways for teams and creative communities to exchange workflows and learn from one another.
It’s flexibility built for focus, with professional tools that adapt to you and the way you work best. And no matter how you work, Affinity keeps up. Built on a high-performance engine, every adjustment updates in real time, from instant previews and detailed edits at 10,000,000% zoom to projects with thousands of layers. It’s ultra-fast, super-smooth, and precise down to the last pixel.
While the all-new Affinity has been reimagined, it still feels instantly familiar to those who know it best. The tools, workflows, and precision you rely on are all here – refined but not replaced. Every update builds on what professionals already love, so you can pick up where you left off and feel right at home.
© Affinity
Free for everyone
From the beginning, Affinity set out to challenge the idea that powerful design tools should come with a hefty price tag. Today, we’re taking that even further.
Affinity is now completely free, forever.
The full, professional-grade Affinity experience, available to everyone.
There’s no catch, no stripped-back version, and no gotchas. The same precise, high-performance tools that professionals rely on every day are now open to all, because creative freedom shouldn’t come with a cost.
Whether you’re an independent designer, a creative studio, or a team building your brand, we believe everyone should have access to the tools they need to create their best work.
Affinity and Canva: Stronger together
Affinity has always been built for people who care deeply about design. Professionals who notice the details others might miss, who stay up late perfecting the final pixel, and who take pride in their craft. That hasn’t changed. But we couldn’t launch the all-new Affinity without something special for the Canva community.
For everyone with a Canva premium account, Canva AI’s tools are now accessible directly inside Affinity through the new Canva AI Studio. This includes familiar favorites like Generative Fill, Expand & Edit, and Remove Background – powerful features that speed up repetitive steps while keeping designers in full control of every detail.
Everything that makes Affinity a precision tool for creative professionals remains at its core: the speed, the control, the depth. Now, those same qualities are enhanced by Canva’s technology, giving you new ways to work faster, experiment more freely, and know that your tools will always keep up. Whether you’re refining a complex composite or extending parts of an image, these features work quietly in the background, supporting your process without ever getting in the way of craft.
We know that transparency around AI use and data handling is essential, and your creative work will always remain yours. Canva AI features are built with privacy and control in mind, ensuring that your creative work in Affinity stays secure, runs on the user's device, and work is not accessed to train AI features.
And when you’re ready to collaborate, scale or publish, you can export your Affinity projects into Canva in just a few clicks, to share with colleagues or clients. It’s the first of many steps toward connecting professional design with everyday creation.
This is a new chapter for professional design. We know some of our community may be curious about what this means for Affinity’s identity. It remains exactly what it’s always been: a professional design suite built for people who care deeply about their craft, now strengthened by Canva’s support and resources to take it even further.
You can also bring your existing work with you. Affinity supports PSD, AI, PDF, SVG, TIFF, IDML, and more, making it easy to open, edit, and collaborate without starting from scratch.
Today is just the beginning. We’re continuing to invest in both Affinity’s professional design tools and Canva’s all-in-one platform, building a future where everyone can design at the highest level, without barriers.
The all-new Affinity is available today for Mac and Windows, with iPad coming next year. The Canva community can activate Affinity with their existing account, while existing Affinity customers and new users can create a free Canva account to download Affinity directly.
For more information, please visit the Affinity website.
How Photography Is the Art of Editing
Did you edit that picture? Was it Photoshopped? These questions miss the point. Editing is a part of the photographic process from the outset, before the shutter is even fired.
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Your Photography Contracts Will Destroy Your Bank Account
Your contract is either your career’s best friend or a ticking time bomb. I’ve been in this business for over 15 years, and I’ve seen creatives lose thousands of dollars, and in some cases, entire portfolios because they didn’t write things down clearly. Photographers, if your contract doesn’t say this, you’re in trouble.
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Halloween Photography Tips
Halloween - it's a perfect time to shoot some portraits and capture some of the small details that make Halloween so spooktacular.
Low Light
Most Halloween themed activities don't start until after the sun's begun to set and that means there's not a lot of light left around to play with. If you're shooting still objects such as pumpkins, you can put your camera on a tripod and use slower shutter speeds but with kids that are running around high on sugar, longer shutter speeds will turn them into streaks of blur. Try using a slightly higher ISO or just shoot your portraits under a porch light or street lamp, to add a little bit of extra light to the scene. You can also head out at dusk when there's still light in the sky but the atmosphere you're trying to capture is just beginning to build.
If your flash is set to automatically fire, switch it off as you'll end up with a shiny looking jack-o-lantern that's lost all of its glow. Instead, use a longer shutter speed, making sure you have your tripod with you to stop shake spoiling your shot. If you find the glow from inside the lantern isn't bright enough, use a few more candles or switch the candles for a torch. You'll just have to position yourself so the torch can't be seen in shot. You can also try bracketing if you find metering to be a problem.
There will, of course, be plenty of people in costume and shooting candids while you're out with your kids trick or treating, should give you plenty of interesting shots. If you're taking photos while they're knocking on a door, position yourself so once the door's open, it won't block your view.
For shots with more impact, get down to the child's level before you take your shot and fill the frame. If you have more than one child to photograph, make sure they're stood close together when taking group shots as people have a habit of putting space between themselves and another person.
Take time to study their makeup and costume to see which parts are the most interesting and should be focused on. If they have a particularly interesting mask, shoot a headshot and if you're going for a full body shot, make sure you take a look at their feet before you do as people tend to head out in shoes that aren't Halloween themed and they can spoil the overall feel of the shot.
Don't forget your basic composition rules such as filling the frame, rule of thirds and giving your subject space to look into.
Small Detail
Look out for the spider's webs, decorations and pumpkins as shots of these, combined with shots of people in fancy dress will give you a great overall account of the day's events.
If you fancy heading to a graveyard to shoot some close-ups of detail or want to use them as a backdrop for portraits, have a look at our previous technique: Graveyard Photography
If you want to give a house a spooky feel, as David did with his image above, or add a ghost to a shot you've already taken, open up Photoshop and have a play around with the various tools and features to see what Halloween-themed image you can create.
