Shooting Minimalist Landscapes When There's Almost Nothing to Shoot
Minimalist photography is harder than it looks. When the summit of Pikes Peak closes due to a storm and your backup plan becomes a flat, windswept stretch of Colorado grassland, the only things separating a great shot from a boring one are patience, the right glass, and knowing how to work with almost nothing.
12 Top Beach Photography Tips For Your Next Vacation
1. What Gear Do I Need?
- Camera – Compact or DSLR
- Camera bag – Keep your gear safe from sand and sea salt when you're not using it.
- Tripod – Something lightweight and portable will be perfect as it won't take up too much room in the car and your arms won't ache after carrying it around all day.
- Polarising filter – Help reduce reflections and boost contrast.
- UV filter – Protect your lens from scratches.
- Hurricane blower and lens cloth – Make sure your lens is free of sea spray and keep grains of sand out.
You might enjoy a day out at the beach but your photography gear won't. Make sure you wipe all of your gear down when you get home and leave it to dry out completely. Spiked feet will stop your tripod slipping into the sand as you're trying to frame up while a UV filter will help stop sand scratching your lens. When you're not using your camera, remember to put it back in your bag and if you're using a DSLR and want to change lenses, try and do it off the beach and out of the wind so sand doesn't get blown where it shouldn't be.
3. What About Time Of Day?
The warm light of an evening will give you better results than midday sun or if you're a morning person, get up early when the sun's at a lower angle so your shots will be more evenly lit without large, deep shadows running through them. There will be less people around at this time too as most of the day-trippers will have left if it's later in the evening or not arrived if you're up at the crack of dawn. Don't dismiss shooting a few shots of a busy beach though, particularly if it's a hot weekend and the sand can't be seen for towels and seats.
4. Don't Just Look Out To Sea
Sweeping vistas of the ocean and cliffs do look great but do try turning around with your camera and photograph the scene that's unfolding behind you. Just be careful who you point your lens at as there is a chance it will upset some parents who'll want to know why you're photographing their children. Try capturing shots that help tell the story of what happened at the beach – close-ups of sun cream bottles, buckets, spades and dropped ice cream cones make great 'fill-in' shots for photo albums and photo books.
When you do shoot out to sea try giving the shot a focal point in the foreground otherwise it can look a little empty. Driftwood, rocks and footprints are just three things you could use to add an extra element of interest to your shot. Just check you're using a small aperture before you take your shot to ensure front-to-back sharpness.
To turn the waves into a smooth, dry ice-like motion you need to set your camera on a tripod and dial down to a slow shutter speed. How slow you need to go will depend on the movement of the waves and how bright it is so some experimentation will probably be needed. If you're struggling to get the speeds you need use a polarising or ND filter to reduce the amount of light entering the lens.
7. Change Your View
If there's a pier get on top of it to give yourself some height. You'll then be able to get more of the beach scene in shot. If you're using a compact camera that has a tilt-shift mode, getting up on the pier will give you the chance to turn the people sat on the beach into model-like characters. If there isn't a pier try extending the centre column on your tripod to give you more height. You may want to pack a remote release in case you can't reach the camera's shutter button when your tripod's extended. It'll also help reduce the chances of shake spoiling your shot.
8. Check Your Horizons
You need to make sure your horizon's straight and try moving its position to draw the viewer's attention to a particular part of the shot. See our previous piece on Horizons for more tips.
9. Shoot A Sunset / Sunrise
You can't go to the coast without photographing a sunrise/sunset (depending on which coast you're on). Just remember to have yourself at your chosen location an hour or so before sunset/rise and make sure you pack your tripod as working hand-held in these low light situations will only cause shake. For more tips on this, take a look at our previous articles:
10. Capture Some Close-UpsShells and pebbles are just two subjects you can use for a spot of close up photography on the beach. For more ideas and tips, take a look at our previous piece: Close Up Work With Compacts.
11. How To Deal With Exposure Problems
The problem with sand sat against a light sky is that it can confuse your camera into underexposing the shot so try using exposure compensation to deliberately overexpose the scene. It can be tricky getting the whole scene exposed correctly and bracketing can help, however, if you have subjects that can't stay still, your shots won't line up when you're back in front of your computer.
If you're working with a compact camera switch it to Beach scene mode from the camera's scene mode or picture mode menu. The Beach scene mode will increase the exposure slightly to compensate but also adjusts the white balance to make the sand look more natural.
To capture your kids running around switch to fast shutter speeds and continuous shooting mode. If you want to slow things down try getting them to do something that'll keep them in one place such as building a sandcastle you'll be able to get some great frame-filling shots of their faces to show their expressions but do zoom out a little too as this will give the shot context. If you find the sun's casting shadows on their face try adding a little fill-in flash and avoid positioning the sun behind you as this will only make them squint. For more tips on shooting portraits at the coast take a look at this article: Holiday Portraits.
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Nikon Nikkor Z 70-200mm f/2.8 VR S II Lens Review
The 70-200mm f/2.8 lenses have been staple fare for many years, an undeniably useful range of focal lengths. They are also likely to be one of the best lenses from any manufacturer's range, pushing the quality towards the technically possible limits of current optical design. When the first version of this new Nikkor Z lens was reviewed some six years ago, it might have seemed that there was very little improvement that could realistically be made, but then here we are with a second generation version II. Faster and quieter focusing, improved VR, 12mm shorter, 362g lighter, better balanced for hand held use and mounting on gimbals, ARCA-SWISS tripod foot, de-clickable control ring; the tweaks and improvements are extensive. Yes, a slightly higher price, but that is relatively small compared to the expected service life of the lens. It's all very enticing, so let's see how it all works out, using the classy 45MP Nikon Z8 camera body, an ideal camera to challenge the new lens's capabilities.
Nikon Nikkor Z 70-200mm f/2.8 VR S II Handling and Features
Current 70-200mm f/2.8 lenses are not small, but the new lens is significantly more compact than its initial form, weighing in at just 998g without the tripod foot and 1180g if the foot is attached. The foot is easily removed and there is a cover sleeve provided that fits in its place, offering protection to the finish of the lens barrel. Measurements are 90mm x 208mm, not exactly svelte but well balanced, a handling improvement when shooting handheld or using a gimbal.
A bayonet fit petal lens hood is provided and this clicks smoothly and positively into position. There is a locking catch. The hood also has a small window that allows access to the rim of filters, so, for example, a polarising filter can be rotated without having to remove the hood. This useful idea has been around for a while. The sliding cover, however, is rather easily operated and may be found to be open when not needed. As this slightly reduces the effectiveness of the hood it would perhaps be a good idea to make the cover firmer in action. Within the bayonet mount for the hood is a standard 77mm filter thread.
First up is the smooth zoom ring, clearly marked at 70mm, 85mm, 105mm, 135mm and 200mm. The action of zooming does not change the length of the lens, but there are groups of elements being shifted so this is a physical control rather than an electronic one. There seems little impact on the balance of the lens.
The four L-Fn2 buttons are next in line, and these can be programmed from the camera body. The focusing ring is electronic, as smooth in action as we would expect, and can be operated to fine tune the AF position once the AF has locked on. This may well be rarely necessary as the super-fast AF system seems to lock on exactly where required with unfailing speed and accuracy. Some of the sample bird shots were actually shot through metal grills and the AF system had no problem dealing with this, locking on every time through the gaps. With a wide aperture, the bars just disappear in the image. This could not be said of other marques being used at the same time that failed to focus most of the time. Beyond this, there are also the four L-Fn buttons, also programmed via the camera.
The thin control ring can also be programmed from the camera body and was set to change the aperture for this review process. There is a switch to engage or switch off the clicks, and as they would certainly be heard when shooting video, the de-clicking facility is essential. The A/M switch selects between AF and MF in the usual way and the focus limiter gives an option to restrict the AF to between 5m and infinity. The implication is that Nikon expect the lens to be used for longer range photography, but an option to set a close limit as well would be logical given the close focusing ability of the lens.
Closest focusing depends upon the focal length selected:
70mm 0.38m 1.25' 0.3x 85mm 0.38m 1.25' 105mm 0.5m 1.64' 135mm 0.6m 1.97' 200mm 0.8m 2.63' 0.25x
Just behind the control ring is the tripod foot, solid but not overly large and having an ARCA-SWISS design. This is very convenient when using ARCA-SWISS style tripod connections. The ring allows the camera to be rotated from landscape to portrait orientation. When the ring is removed, there is a protective collar provided that covers the connection area around the barrel.
Focusing is driven by Nikon's Silky Smooth VCM motors and is indeed super-fast, as well as being staggeringly accurate and virtually silent. Focus breathing is minimised with videographers in mind. VR (Vibration Reduction) offers a 6 stop advantage, although this does nothing at all for subject movement, so for wildlife, a high shutter speed may well still be needed. Synchro VR is available with selected bodies and this optimises the VR between the centre of the images and the peripheral areas. Compatible bodies are currently Z9, Z8, Z6 III, Z5 II, Zf and ZR.
Optical construction is 18 elements in 16 groups, including 1 ED, 1 Super ED, 2 Aspherical, 1 Aspherical ED, 1 Fluorite and 1 SR. The use of fluorite, an expensive option, indicates a serious intent to aim for the highest quality. ARNEO and Super Integrated coatings are used, along with meso amorphous coatings. There is also the fluorite coating for the front element to repel dust, grease and moisture. The lens as a whole is sealed against dust and moisture. The diaphragm comprises 11 blades and produces a nicely rounded aperture.
There is also compatibility with both of the Nikon Z teleconverters. TC-1.4x offers a maximum reach of 280mm. TC-2.0x offers a maximum reach of 400mm. These offer a convenient way to carry a longer lens with a minimum of bulk, although there is a loss of speed, the 1.4x converter losing one stop and the 2.0x converter losing two stops. The converters were not included and are not part of this review.
Handling is very comfortable and the only real drawback is the weight of the lens. It may be lighter than the first version but it still has a fair bit of bulk about it. However, just feel the quality of the results, and it's perhaps a small price to pay for such excellence.
Nikon Nikkor Z 70-200mm f/2.8 VR S II Performance
At 70mm, central sharpness is outstanding from f/2.8 to f/11, excellent at f/16 and very good at f/22. The edges are excellent from f/2.8 right through to f/16 and are still very good at f/22.
At 105mm, central sharpness is outstanding from f/2.8 to f/5.6 and excellent from f/2.8 to f/22. The edges are excellent from f/2.8 to f/16 and very good at f/22.
At 160mm, central sharpness is excellent from f/2.8 to f/16 and very good at f/22. Likewise, the edges are excellent from f/2.8 to f/16 and very good at f/22.
It's pretty obvious that sharpness is just about as good as it gets and Nikon continues at the top of its game.
Nikon Nikkor Z 70-200mm f/2.8 VR S II MTF Charts Previous Next
How to read our MTF chartsThe blue column represents readings from the centre of the picture frame at the various apertures and the green is from the edges.
For this review, the lens was tested on a Sony A7R III body using Imatest. Want to know more about how we review lenses?
CA (Chromatic Aberration) is highly corrected for and there is no sign of any colour fringing, even when the lighting and subject conditions are severe.
Distortion is virtually banished and the lens is as close to being rectilinear as makes no difference. Many macro lenses are not this good. Figures are almost zero, being actually zero at 70mm, +0.06% pincushion at 105mm and +0.02% pincushion at 160mm.
Nikon Nikkor Z 70-200mm f/2.8 VR S II Chromatic Aberration Charts Previous Next
How to read our CA chartsChromatic aberration (CA) is the lens' inability to focus on the sensor or film all colours of visible light at the same point. Severe chromatic aberration gives a noticeable fringing or a halo effect around sharp edges within the picture. It can be cured in software.
Apochromatic lenses have special lens elements (aspheric, extra-low dispersion etc) to minimize the problem, hence they usually cost more.
For this review, the lens was tested on a Sony A7R III body using Imatest.
Bokeh is the smoothness of gradation in the out of focus areas in an image. This is an aesthetic judgement rather than a measurement, and this new lens gives us some very beautiful bokeh indeed. It is relatively unusual to see smooth bokeh along with such high resolution, but Nikon manage it with apparent ease.
The flare performance is also excellent, clearly the design, internal baffling and coatings are all combining to do an excellent job of suppressing internal reflections.
Vignetting is very well controlled.
Aperture 70mm 105mm 160mm f/2.8 -0.8 -1.4 -1.2 f/4 -0.6 -1.3 -0.6 f/5.6 -0.5 -1.1 -0.5 f/8 -0.5 -1.1 -0.4 f/11 -0.5 -1.1 -0.4 f/16 -0.5 -1.1 -0.4 f/22 -0.5 -1.1 -0.4
Nikon Nikkor Z 70-200mm f/2.8 VR S II Sample Photos Previous Next
Nikon Nikkor Z 70-200mm f/2.8 VR S II Aperture range Previous Next
You can view additional images in the Equipment Database, where you can add your own reviews, photos and product ratings.
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Value For MoneyThe [AMUK]Nikkor Z 70-200mm f/2.8 VR S II|Nikkor+Z+70-200mm+f/2.8+VR+S+II[/AMUK] lens is priced at £2999.00
There is a wide array of options for this specification, and to see where the pricing falls, here is a selection of them from all marques. These will not necessarily fit Nikon Z cameras, but still offer a benchmark for pricing.
- [AMUK]Nikkor Z 70-200mm f/2.8 VR S|Nikkor+Z+70-200mm+f/2.8+VR+S[/AMUK], £2599
- [AMUK]Canon RF 70-200mm f/2.8 IS USM|Canon+RF+70-200mm+f/2.8+IS+USM[/AMUK], £2999
- [AMUK]Panasonic Lumix S Pro 70-200mm f/2.8 OIS|Panasonic+Lumix+S+Pro+70-200mm+f/2.8+OIS[/AMUK], £1991
- [AMUK]Sigma 70-200mm f/2.8 DG OS HSM|Sigma+70-200mm+f/2.8+DG+OS+HSM[/AMUK], £1199
- [AMUK]Sony FE 70-200mm f/2.8 GM OSS II|Sony+FE+70-200mm+f/2.8+GM+OSS+II[/AMUK], £2600
Although at the high end of the range, the pricing seems about right.
Nikon Nikkor Z 70-200mm f/2.8 VR S II Verdict
Smaller, lighter, sharper, faster, better balanced, what's not to like about this new version of an already superb optic? It all has to be weighed up against the increased cost, but that is probably worth it for the improvements and the better handling for videographers as well as stills photographers. We do lose the small OLED display of the original lens but that is a very small price.
In the end, the enjoyment of the quality kicks in and the perception is of absolutely impeccable results, at a price of course, but that is inevitable. It is true that Nikon produces many lower-cost lenses that are also incredibly good, but these have slower apertures and do not offer the versatility of the new lens.
It's a clear and definite Editor's Choice.
Nikon Nikkor Z 70-200mm f/2.8 VR S II Pros
- Outstanding sharpness
- Virtually no distortion
- Fast, accurate and virtually silent AF
- Excellent flare resistance
- Almost zero CA
- Moisture and dust sealing
- 0.3x magnification at 70mm
- 6 stops VR
- Synchro VR with compatible bodies
- Modest vignetting
- Beautiful bokeh
Nikon Nikkor Z 70-200mm f/2.8 VR S II Cons
- Price
[REVIEW_FOOTER]R_features=5|R_handling=5|R_performance=5|R_value=4.5|R_overall=5|A_level=5|A_text=Editor's Choice – Pricey but Superb quality, a truly top of the line telephoto zoom lens.|E_id=8027[/REVIEW_FOOTER]
.borders { border: 1px solid #ccc !important; border-collapse: collapse; } .borders td,.borders tr { border: 1px solid #ccc !important; } .borders { border: 1px solid #ccc !important; border-collapse: collapse; } .borders td,.borders tr { border: 1px solid #ccc !important; }10 Handy DIY Photography Tricks & Hacks To Learn Today
Not everyone's a fan of DIY but building your own camera and creating your own filters can be fun, plus it's usually cheaper and who doesn't like to save a pound or two? So, here are 10 DIY photography tricks & hacks for you to try on a rainy day.
This one does involve spending slightly more than just a few quid but at the end of it, you do get a camera that's fully functional. The Bigshot DIY Camera and Lomography Konstruktor are a couple of examples of the kind of kits you can purchase.
Filters, particularly DIY ones, can be used with all types of cameras (including phones) and they can help you create interesting effects without having to break the bank or learn a new photo editing technique. Something as simple as a sweet wrapper (think Quality Streets) wrapped around your lens and secured in place with an elastic band can add colour to your shots while a pair of tights cut to size and pulled over your lens will give you a soft focus effect.
Who doesn't like a bit of Bokeh? But you don't just have to settle for circular out of focus highlights as you can use a few tools and your creativity to change the appearance of the shapes that appear. You need to get a black piece of card, decide on a shape, cut it out of the card then fasten the card around your lens like you would a lens hood. Try to not make your shapes too small or complicated as they won't stand out very well in your final shot.
Macro lenses are great for getting close to subjects, but as with all lenses, they're an investment and aren't something all of us can go out and purchase. However, with the help of a reversing ring, you can shoot close-up work in an inexpensive way. You simply attach the reversing ring to the filter thread of your lens which then allows you to attach your lens to your camera in reverse. They can be tricky to use but they do offer one of the cheapest ways of capturing macro shots. For more tips on working with reversing rings, have a read of this article: Reversing Your Lens For Ultra Close-Ups
5. Use A Magnifying Glass & Shoot Macros
Another way to shoot macros without a macro lens is by taping a magnifying glass to the front of your camera. You can use most magnifying glasses as close up lenses as long as the magnifier is big enough to cover the front of your lens. For more tips, have a read of this: Macro Photography With A Magnifying Glass
6. Make Your Own ReflectorNothing beats the tin foil sheet that you'd normally wrap the turkey up into throw masses of light back into your subject. You just need to cut out a piece of card, apply glue or tape to it, carefully roll the tin foil over the glued cardboard, smooth out the tin foil with a sponge or cloth and leave to dry. You may need to trim the edges and you can apply tape around it too if you want it to look a little neater.
A tripod is usually the support photographers turn to but when you want to travel light or venture to places where tripods and similar supports aren't allowed to be used, you have to look for an alternative. One of these alternative options is a beanbag and even though you can purchase ready-made models, they're not hard to make yourself and the materials aren't expensive either. Basically, you just need some fabric, beans/polystyrene balls and a sewing machine or needle and thread. There are plenty of tutorials online with step-by-step instructions on how to construct a beanbag, including these found on Instructables: Camera Bean Bag Instructions
A flash diffuser is a useful tool but why buy one when you can create your own at home? Click the following link to view a tutorial that will take you through the steps for making your own interchangeable flash diffuser, with changing filter options, for whatever light source you come across when taking photos: Build A Flash Diffuser
9. Building A DIY Modular Flash System
Flash accessories can be made for next to nothing, all that is needed is a little creativity and a little spare time, as site member Paul Morgan explained in this tutorial: Building A DIY Modular Flash System
10. Get Creative With Light With An Old Lens
There's a technique you may not have come across called Lens Wacking and the idea is you allow more stray light to reach the sensor and to do this you shoot with the lens detached from and held in front of the camera body. It can be tricky to master but can create some really interesting, dream-like lighting effects and bokeh with just the help of an old, cheap manual lens you have at home. For more tips on how to perfect this technique that gives your images a cinematic feel, have a read of the Lens Wacking tutorial on Pentax User.
If you have any DIY photography tips or hacks others should have a go at, feel free to post them in the comments below.
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Five Key Lessons to Learn Before Buying Film and Photography Gear
After three decades as a professional filmmaker and photographer, I have learned a lot of things. Most of them, I learned the hard way.
So, in today's article I'm going to give you five lessons I've learned over the course of a long career when it comes to what really matters, and what doesn't, when it comes to buying gear.
5 Things That Are Worth Splurging On in Photography (and 5 That Are Not)
Photography has a spending problem, and it starts early. The moment you get serious enough to move past the kit lens and the auto mode, the industry opens a firehose of recommendations pointed directly at your wallet. Better bodies, faster glass, studio lighting, editing software, bags, straps, filters, presets, printers, and accessories that promise to make your work look professional before you have figured out what "professional" means for you.
Photoshop 27.6 Has 14 New Features: Here's What Changed
Photoshop 27.6 dropped with 14 new features, and some of them are genuinely useful while others expose real limitations in Adobe's AI tools. Knowing what works and what doesn't before you spend credits on generative fills can save you a lot of frustration.
The Viltrox 35mm f/1.2 Lab N Fixed What Was Already a Near-Perfect Lens
Viltrox's 35mm f/1.2 Lab was already one of the sharpest, most capable lenses in its class when it launched. The new "N" version strips out the OLED screen and replaces the unconventional control ring with a traditional aperture ring, and that single change makes a lens that was optically exceptional finally handle the way it should.
Sony RX1R Mark III vs. Leica Q3: Which Premium Compact Actually Wins?
The Sony RX1R Mark III launched to a lot of ridicule. At $5,100 with no IBIS, no tilt screen, and a battery that's been around since 2013, the internet had a field day, and honestly, the criticism wasn't wrong on the specs alone.
Canon RF 35mm f/1.4 L VCM vs. Sony FE 35mm f/1.4 GM: Which Flagship 35mm Actually Wins?
Canon and Sony each make a flagship 35mm lens, and on paper they're remarkably close in size, weight, price, and optical spec. But close on paper doesn't always mean close in practice, and the differences that do exist could matter depending on how you shoot.
What To Photograph Around The UK Hedgerows
If you're on the hunt for insects and flowers take your macro lens along but if you want to photograph the many birds and small mammals that live in the hedgerow you'll need a telephoto or zoom lens so you can observe and take your photographs from a distance that won't scare them off.
A tripod or even a beanbag will give your arms a rest and stop you shaking the camera when you're working on those frame-filling shots. Use a remote release or if you don't have one make use of the self-timer as this will give you enough time to press the shutter and move away so your movement won't blur your shot. As it's dark and shadowy inside a hedgerow take a reflector out with you to add and direct light into the shot.
If you're going to be working on the ground it's worth taking a gardener's kneeling pad with you to keep your knees dry and a little comfier.
Capturing Shots Of Flowers
Whatever time of year you do your hedgerow flower photography, if you use your lens' minimum aperture to give your flower shots greater depth of field, remember this will slow your shutter speed down so watch out for camera shake.
Top Tips On Bird Photography
If it's birds you're searching for wrens and thrushes are just two of the species you'll find nesting in the dense cover. This can make them hard to spot, but most birds prefer taller, mature hedges where there are plenty of trees around they can perch on so keep an eye out for areas like this. Also, spend enough time around these older, well-developed areas and you may even spot shy blue tits, owls and even bats if you're out late enough. Keep your ears open for bird song too as this will give away even the smallest of birds locations.
If your focus is a particular branch have your lens focused and exposure locked in place so when the bird lands you can quickly snap your shot. You may find continuous shooting's useful and keep an eye on your exposure as a bright sky and a dark subject can confuse the camera into thinking it needs to underexpose the shot.
Make sure you don't disturb any nests and don't trespass! Stick to public paths or better still, your own garden.
Shoot From A Bird's Eye View
If you live near a hill or can get to higher ground try photographing a group of fields. The patchwork of colour, particularly towards the summer with rapeseed, separated by rows of hedges makes a great looking photograph. Try doing a year-long hedgerow safari too as the flora and wildlife will continuously change so there'll be ample to photograph.
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Evoto Expands All-in-One AI Photography Ecosystem Across Desktop, Instant, Mobile, iPad, and Video
Evoto has released an updated ecosystem brief presenting its products as a connected shoot-to-delivery workflow rather than separate editing apps. The structure links capture, culling, retouching, cloud sync, and publishing across multiple devices and product surfaces.
Key Takeaways
- Evoto’s ecosystem includes Desktop, Instant, Mobile, iPad, and Video products with role-based workflow handoff.
- Evoto Desktop v7.1.0 extends AI Lab (Smart Removal, People Removal, AI Scene) alongside Personalized AI Looks and Perfect Shot.
- The system is designed for photography teams that need repeatable editing quality across high-volume projects.
- Product messaging emphasizes automation for repetitive tasks while keeping final creative control with photographers and editors.
All-in-One AI Photo Editing Platform for 2026 Workflows
In the current positioning, Evoto Desktop remains the main post-production environment for large projects, while Evoto Instant is the delivery endpoint for online galleries and access-controlled sharing. Evoto Mobile and Evoto iPad support on-site and in-transit workflows, and Evoto Video extends finishing work into motion deliverables.
This ecosystem framing follows a pattern seen in current media coverage of imaging software: clear role assignment by device and stage, with less emphasis on broad AI claims and more emphasis on production continuity.
Seamless Workflow for Professional AI Photography
Evoto describes a five-stage operating flow:
1. Capture and ingest
Images enter through tethered shooting or import pathways, then are assigned to project-level structures.
2. Selection and grouping
AI-assisted culling helps flag technical rejects and organize similar frames for faster review.
3. Editing and consistency
Teams apply shared portrait and color logic in batch, while keeping the option for manual adjustments on individual frames.
4. Delivery and access
Approved outputs are routed into sharing workflows, including gallery-based distribution through Evoto Instant where enabled.
5. Video extension
Projects that require motion output can continue through Evoto Video for visual alignment with photo deliverables.
This sequence is aimed at reducing workflow breaks between tools, especially in event and school scenarios where deadlines are tight and image volume is high.
AI Culling and Retouching Tools for Pro Photographers
Across the suite, Evoto emphasizes AI as an assistant layer for repetitive operations:
- automated pre-sorting to reduce manual culling load
- batch-oriented portrait retouching and color handling
- consistency controls across multi-image sets
- optional cross-device continuation when projects move from desktop to delivery channels
Evoto also references recent Desktop-side feature evolution in v7.1.0 as part of the wider ecosystem value rather than isolated features. The Desktop draft aligns three feature groups:
1. AI Lab
A creative module for AI-assisted cleanup and scene composition workflows. The current AI Lab scope in this draft includes:
- Smart Removal: removes selected distractions with subject protection options in supported scenes.
- People Removal: detects and removes passersby or extra people in eligible images.
- AI Scene: supports subject cutout, background replacement, and layered foreground setup for controlled visual staging.
2. Personalized AI Looks
A style-training workflow that allows users to build reusable looks from their own edited image sets, then apply those looks across future projects.
3. Perfect Shot
A group-photo workflow that helps replace expressions from adjacent images when subjects blink or miss gaze direction.
Real-Time Tethered Shooting and Delivery for Events
For event and location work, Evoto positions Mobile and iPad as practical companions to Desktop rather than replacements. The workflow message is: capture and review in the field, then consolidate in Desktop for volume editing, then publish through Instant for client-facing access.
The Instant layer is presented as a delivery workflow rather than only a gallery viewer, including project sharing paths, branding controls, and participant-oriented access options depending on setup.
This cross-product chain is particularly relevant for:
- school portrait operations
- event photographers handling rapid turnaround
- studio teams requiring collaborative post pipelines
- hybrid teams delivering both photo and short-form video outputs
Professional Photo Editing Ecosystem With Cloud Sync Features
Evoto describes cloud sync as the connective mechanism across products. In operational terms, this means teams can maintain a central project logic while switching execution context by device and task.
The company notes that not every feature is universally available in every context. Plan tier, region, hardware support, image format, and release channel can all affect capability access.
Who This Workflow Is For
Based on current product documentation and positioning language, the ecosystem is primarily targeted at:
- portrait professionals handling repeatable edits at scale
- studios with multi-editor throughput requirements
- photographers who need on-site review plus later desktop finishing
- teams that want a single ecosystem across capture, edit, and delivery
Availability
Official product channels:
- https://www.evoto.ai/ai-photo-editor
- https://instant.evoto.ai/
- https://www.evoto.ai/ipad
- https://www.evoto.ai/evoto-mobile
- https://video.evoto.ai/
About Evoto
Evoto is a software company that builds AI-assisted imaging tools for professional photographers, retouchers, and visual production teams. Its product line spans desktop editing, cloud gallery and delivery (Evoto Instant), mobile and tablet apps, and video finishing—designed so studios can move from capture through batch retouching to client delivery in one connected workflow. The team focuses on high-volume portrait and event use cases, with an emphasis on workflow speed, repeatable quality, and user-controlled creative decisions.
In 2026, user-review platforms Capterra and Software Advice recognized Evoto AI across multiple photo-editing and AI software categories, including ease of use, value, recommendation, and customer support. Profiles: https://www.capterra.com/p/10015499/Evoto-AI/ and https://www.softwareadvice.com/product/515822-Evoto-AI/.
More information is available at https://www.evoto.ai/
Why the 85mm f/1.8 Beats the 85mm f/1.4 for 95% of Photographers
The 85mm prime is the rare lens that almost every working portrait photographer owns, eventually. It is the focal length that does the most flattering work on faces, the easiest one to recommend to a portrait beginner, and the lens most photographers reach for when they want to make a person look the way they want to be seen.
Critique the Community: Dark
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. If you have images that play off of darker tones or contain mostly black, unlit areas, we would love to see them!
I Still Shoot With an iPhone 8 in 2026 and I Don't Plan to Upgrade
Let's get this out of the way: this is not nostalgia.
I'm not trying to "bring back" anything, especially a smartphone. I'm not interested in retro aesthetics for the sake of it. And I'm definitely not here to argue that older technology is somehow superior.
I use an iPhone 8 because it works for me, and a smartphone for me is just a smartphone — something I use to communicate.
5 Natural Light Portrait Mistakes That Make Your Images Look Flat
Shooting portraits in natural light sounds simple until you realize how many ways it can go wrong. Knowing the five most common mistakes, and how to fix them, is the difference between images that look flat and ones that have real depth and drama.
Top Tips On Capturing Arty Style Flower Photographs
If you're a fan of black & white photography, with a twist of fine art and macro flower photography thrown in, you've come to the right article as we're teaching you how to get all Mapplethorpe at home with one flower and a few photography tools.
Light & EquipmentThe location for this shoot was a living room, making most of the light pouring through the window. Direct sunlight is too harsh for this work so the set up was placed away from the window. A macro lens is ideal for this subject and it's always a good idea to mount your camera on a tripod for stability. Use a remote release, if you have one, to fire the shutter and if your camera has it, the mirror lock-up facility can also help minimise any risk of camera shake.
Backgrounds
The background needs to be plain and a piece of black material will work fine. The examples shown here were shot against a black fleece draped over the back of a chair and some on black slate slabs which goes to show you really can use anything!
Focusing was done manually, which is always best for macro work when the lens can search for focus and aperture-priority was used, along with the exposure compensation facility to fine-tune the result. With a white lily against a black backdrop, the risk of poor exposure is quite high, so you may need to make minor adjustments as you go along.
For the above shot, the lens was set to its smallest aperture (f/36) for maximum depth-of-field which gave a shutter speed of 2secs. All the pictures here were done at ISO200.
Next, the flowers were moved closer to the camera and the lens was opened to its maximum aperture to throw the closer flower out of focus.
Closer still, these shots focus on the flower's stamen, with the shot to the right excluding the black backdrop completely. Depth-of-field, when you’re this close to the subject, is minimal even at a small aperture, as the images to the right shot at f/36 shows.
Quite a few cameras have a multiple exposure feature which will allow two or more exposures to be captured on the same frame. To create the effect shown in the following shot you need to capture one exposure sharp and one totally defocused.
If photographing the flower straight-on doesn't produce the look you're trying to create, try laying it down on a plain surface. The flower in the following shot had to be held in place with a piece of tape to open up the petal.
Black & White
Most digital cameras, even modest compacts, have a monochrome mode, which offers a quick way to enjoy black & white photography. However, convenient though this mode is, the image file straight out of the camera can lack contrast and may need some work in your editing software if you’re going to get the most from it.
The shot on the left is the JPEG monochrome file straight out of the camera and it looks a little flat. The right image is the same shot but the Levels were tweaked in Photoshop which gives more intense blacks and brighter whites.
It’s worth remembering that if you’re shooting in JPEG format, images shot in the monochrome setting will record in black & white only and you can’t produce a colour image should you change your mind later. Shoot Raw and even though the camera monitor might show the mono result you have the full-colour file at your disposal. The best option, if your camera has it, is to shoot in Raw and fine quality JPEG at the same time.
Many cameras have the option of letting you modify your shots using contrast filters (yellow, orange and red are the most popular), toning effects and Art Filters. Some of which can work well with this type of photography so it's worth experimenting with.
Used sparingly, toning monochrome images is a very effective technique and if your camera doesn't allow you to apply effects while shooting, you can always adjust your shots in image editing software.
You've read the technique now share your related photos for the chance to win prizes: Daily Forum Competition
The Best 35mm Lens for Fujifilm X Isn't What You'd Expect
Choosing a normal-length prime for your Fujifilm X system sounds straightforward until you realize there are seven legitimate autofocus options sitting in roughly the same focal length range, each with a different price, build, and rendering character. The gap between the best and worst of them is smaller than you'd expect, but the differences in autofocus reliability and real-world usability are anything but trivial.
Why a Career Canon Shooter Is Switching to the Nikon Z 8
The Nikon Z 8 is a camera that has generated a lot of conversation since Nikon acquired Red Cinema, but most of that conversation focuses on specs and codec comparisons. What's harder to find is a perspective from someone who actually shot on a Red camera for years, sold it, moved on, and then picked up the Z 8 expecting to be underwhelmed.
Fujifilm X-T30 III Review: 6.2K Video in a $1,000 Camera Is Hard to Ignore
The Fujifilm X-T30 III sits at $1,000 body only, positioning it as one of Fujifilm's most accessible entry points into the X-series system. For that price, you're getting a 26-megapixel APS-C camera with some video specs that don't match what you'd expect from a camera in this range.
