4 Basic Town & City Photography Tips For You To Read
1. Gear Suggestions
A zoom will let you capture details and a wide-angle lens will give you a bigger depth of field to help the viewer understand the location. A tripod is useful but as you're on the move a monopod is even better as is a bag that will give you quick, easy access. Spare batteries are always handy, too.
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2. Time Of DayAs you live there you'll have a rather good idea about what's around your town but do you always go there at the same time? By taking a walk during different times of the day you'll be able to see how the light/angle changes and how many people will be there. If you go early morning you'll find that the light is more diffused whereas twilight will give you a dark blue sky and detail from the lights in the town/city. If you don't want people in your shot then early morning is better and the streets are cleaner, less cluttered. If you want people in your shots, the town at nine o'clock in the morning will have those on the commute while three hours later you'll have shoppers. Also, people do draw attention away from the surroundings so unless they add to the composition of the image do you really want them in the shot?
3. Patterns, Textures And ReflectionsContrasting architecture, colours and textures work well and all towns feature buildings built in different years, even centuries. A brand new, metal and glass tower block will contrast an old, pub well for instance.
Reflections in buildings, in puddles or even water features, can add a twist to an architectural image. You should take your time to see what angles work best and if glare gets too much use a polarising filter.
Why not shoot to tell a story or pick a theme? You could choose to photograph the theme of food suppliers, for example, and this could be anything from greasy spoons to greengrocers and supermarkets. Or how about a project on shop windows, or numbers, or signs? If there's any construction going on, make a series out of the building work. If you know of a major renovation you could do a photo a day from start to completion.
Look for shots that show how your community live. Meeting places, parks or even washing lines full of washing outside someone's house can all make for good pictures - and have a social element.
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10 Things Every Photographer Googles but Would Never Admit
There are two kinds of photographer search histories: the one they'd show you and the one that actually exists. The public version is full of noble queries like "Rembrandt lighting setup" and "Ansel Adams zone system." The private version, the real one, is a graveyard of 2 AM panic searches, basic questions asked for the fifth time, and full-sentence pleas typed into Google with the desperation of someone defusing a bomb.
Every photographer has these searches. Nobody talks about them. Consider this article a safe space.
5 Top Park Photography Tips
Local parks are one of the best places to find a wide variety of photographic subjects. Plus, you'll be enjoying the outdoors and getting some exercise at the same time so what's not to like?
If you're just going for a quick walk around the park pocketing a compact will be fine but for those who will be taking their camera and interchangeable lenses along, pack your telephoto lens for shots of dog walkers, animals and long shots of the park with your town in the background. For close up work with flowers and leaves pocket your macro lens.
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An overcast day, when the light is gently diffused, is the perfect time to capture flowers and foliage. They look even better after a light rain shower as the vibrant greens will jump right out of your frame. If you spot a squirrel while looking through the trees and bushes keep your distance and use a telephoto lens to fill the frame with the cute animal. For those of you who have streams, ponds or even lakes in the park you're visiting why not have a go at duck/swan photography. In most locations, the ducks are used to people so getting close to them shouldn't be a problem.
If it's a fine day there should be plenty of people for you to snap a few candids of as they pass by. Try shooting from the hip or if someone such as a park warden tidying up really catches your eye, remember to ask them if they mind you taking their photo before you snap away.
Paths and lines of flowerbeds can be used to guide the eye through the image while repetitive patterns such as lines of trees, street lighting and fencing can add symmetrical interest to your shots.
If your park has wooded areas you could have a go at capturing beams of light bursting through the trees but this usually means you'll need an early start and shooting on a misty morning is a must.
Don't forget that statues, monuments and water features make great photographic subjects and most parks will have one if not all of these on display somewhere. Try looking for glimpses of buildings in your town through the leaves on the trees or gaps in the hedges. The contrast of green or even the golden colours of Autumn later on in the year against the glass and concrete of the town can work extremely well. Then, when you leave the park, find a hill to climb and photograph the patchwork of greens that break up the grey lines of the town.
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Boudoir Photography Has a Branding Problem (And Most of Us Caused It)
Go look at ten boudoir photographers' websites right now. Read their About pages. Read their taglines. Read the part where they describe the experience. Now try to remember which one was which. You can't. That's the problem.
Somewhere along the way, the boudoir industry settled on about ten acceptable words: empowering, confident, beautiful, goddess, queen, fierce, sensual, timeless, stunning, luxurious. Then every photographer on the planet grabbed the same handful and arranged them in slightly different orders. Like a game of empowerment mad libs.
The Right Focal Length for Portraits Isn't What Most People Think
The lens you choose doesn't just affect background blur or how much of a scene fits in the frame. It physically changes how your subject's face looks, and if you're picking focal lengths based on habit rather than intention, you may be getting results that don't match what you're seeing in real life.
The Right Way to Isolate and Recolor Clothing in Photoshop
Changing clothing color in Photoshop sounds simple until you realize the color you're targeting also exists in your subject's skin. That overlap is where most attempts fall apart, and fixing it the right way requires a few specific steps that aren't obvious if you're just dragging hue sliders.
What Professional Photographers Are Actually Worth in the Age of AI
The question of what a professional photographer is actually worth in 2026, when anyone with a phone or an AI prompt can produce a compelling image, is one that cuts to the core of building a sustainable career behind the camera. If you can't answer it clearly, charging real money for your work becomes almost impossible to justify.
The Best AI Audio Cleanup Tools for Noisy Video
Bad audio can sink an otherwise great video. Whether your guest recorded on a laptop mic, you were stuck near an AC unit, or background music crept into your footage, the fix used to take real technical skill. Now, three AI tools can handle most of it in seconds.
6 Outdoor Flower Photography Tips Every Compact Camera User & Smartphone Photographer Needs
As the above image shows, with lenses designed for macro photography attached to a more advanced camera, you can capture great outdoor flower shots. However, just because you're a compact user doesn't mean you shouldn't shoot outdoor flower shots. In fact, with these few tips, you'll soon be on your way to capturing an excellent example of flower photography.
Compact cameras come with various white balance presets that tell the camera what type of light source you are taking your photographs under. Some settings vary from camera-to-camera but there are four you'll see on all models which are: Auto, Daylight, Cloudy, Tungsten and Fluorescent. When working outdoors, try the Daylight setting (usually a sun symbol) when working on bright days and the Cloudy setting for overcast days.
2. Use Macro ModeIf you want to make one flower your subject rather than focusing on a group, switch to macro mode. The Macro mode, which has a flower head icon, can be found either on the mode dial if your camera has one, or, in your camera's menu system. Some compacts focus within millimetres of your subject while others have a minimum focusing distance of a few centimetres. However, results can still be excellent.
3. AF Mode
If you struggle to get the camera to focus on the point you want then switch your focus mode. Various modes are available and different modes suit different purposes. Spot can be useful when you have one specific flower to focus on as this mode is fixed more towards the centre of the screen. You can position your camera so the target marker is over your the subject you want to focus on then all you have to do is half-press the shutter button to focus then take your shot.
4. Try Using Exposure Compensation
Dark backgrounds are great for shooting lighter coloured flowers against as it'll allow them to 'pop' from the frame. However, a large dark background which only has a small area of highlight in can fool your camera into thinking the scene is darker than it actually is and as a result, it can end up looking overexposed. Switching to spot metering can help with this but you may also need to have a play with exposure compensation to produce a more balanced exposure.
5. Think About Distance
By Zooming in closer to your subject, it'll fill the foreground of the frame and chances are the background will be thrown nicely out of focus so it's blurred. This is because the depth of field becomes shallower. Ensuring there's distance between your subject and background will also make it easier for your camera to throw the background out of focus. By doing so, the background won't be a distraction and all attention will fall on your flower rather than what's around or behind it.
6. Learn To Use The Histogram
LCD screens can be used to preview images on but when it's sunny it can be hard to judge if the exposure is correct and this is where the histogram comes in useful.
Basically, you don't want the graph to be touching the left or right border and you want it to peak more in the middle and get lower towards either end. There are times when this won't apply but generally, it works.
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Canon Secures 32nd Consecutive Win at 2026 iF Design Awards
Canon has received eight accolades at the 2026 iF Design Awards, marking thirty-two years of consecutive recognition for the company's industrial design. This year's awards were granted to a range of products within Canon's portfolio, including mirrorless cameras, digital cinema equipment, and industrial printing solutions. These honors reflect the brand's ongoing participation in global design standards and its ability to deliver products across multiple technology sectors.
From Canon:
Canon announces that eight Canon Group product designs were recognised by iF International Forum Design GmbH at the iF Design Award 2026. This year marks the 32nd consecutive year in which Canon designs have won iF Design Awards. Canon Medical Systems Corporation's Aquilion Rise CT scanner was selected for an iF Gold Award, the highest distinction.
iF Design Award 2026 Gold winning productProduct name Full-body CT scanner Aquilion Rise (Canon Medical Corporation)
iF Design Award 2026 winning products
Product name Mirrorless camera EOS R50 V Compact digital camera PowerShot V1 3D lens RF-S7.8mm F4 STM DUAL Digital cinema camera EOS C400 Digital cinema camera EOS C50 Industrial inkjet label press LabelStream LS2000 Large-format hybrid printe
Colorado XL-series
(Canon Production Printing Netherlands B.V.)
iF Design Award 2026 Gold winning product
Aquilion Rise, full-body CT scanner
iF Design Award 2026 winning products
RF-S7.8mm F4 STM DUAL, 3D lens
PowerShot V1, compact digital camera
EOS R50 V, mirrorless camera (shown with RF-S14-30mm F4-6.3 IS STM PZ lens attached)
EOS C400, digital cinema camera (shown with CN-R85mm T1.3 L F lens attached)
EOS C50, digital cinema camera (shown with RF85mm F1.4 L VCM lens attached)
Colorado XL-series, large-format hybrid printer
LabelStream LS2000, industrial inkjet label press
About the iF Design Award
Established in 1953, the iF Design Award is one of the most prestigious design awards in the world. It recognizes outstanding industrial designs worldwide. This year, international design experts judged over 10,000 entries from 68 countries and regions across nine disciplines: product, packaging, branding & communication, service design, architecture, interior design, concept, user experience, and user interface.
For more information, please visit the Canon UK website.
When Nikon Got It Wrong: Five Cameras That Flopped
Nikon has released some of the most iconic cameras, including the Nikon F in 1959 and the D1 in 1999, the first digital camera to replace film for working professionals. Occasionally, even the legends miss.
What Is Dual Gain ISO and Why Does It Matter?
Most photographers think of base ISO as a single number: the setting that produces the cleanest possible image with the widest dynamic range. In reality, even "base ISO" is more complicated than it sounds.
Lightroom's 4 Sharpening Methods and When to Use Each One
Lightroom has at least four distinct ways to sharpen an image, and most people only use one or two of them. Knowing when to use each one and how to combine them is the difference between sharpening that looks deliberate and sharpening that looks overdone.
For Anyone Who Wants To Fly: Our First Look at the New DJI Avata 360 Drone
It used to be scary and intimidating to fly a drone, let alone film using one. Nowadays, flying a drone means seeing the world from a different perspective — in this case, all 360 degrees.
The Hidden Lesson Behind a First Photography Print Sale
Deciding to print and sell your own work is one of those things that's easy to keep putting off, and Faizal Westcott finally stopped putting it off. The process taught him things about printing, paper, pricing, and the psychology of selling art that most people don't think about until they're already in it.
The 35mm, 50mm, and 85mm System a Working Photojournalist Actually Uses
Choosing between a 35mm, 50mm, and 85mm prime comes down to more than personal preference; it's about knowing exactly why you're reaching for each one before you ever raise the camera. Most people skip that question entirely, and it shows in their work.
How To Photograph Spring Lambs
Lambs are not only cute, but they're also a sign Spring is well-and-truely on its way so they make us doubly happy. Cuteness and happiness aside, they're great subjects for outdoor photos as not only do they make people go 'ahh' they're also pretty active so you can capture some great action shots as well as images that are a little calmer.
To set you up for your lamb-themed photography shoot, we've got 5 essential tips to share with you.
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1. Don't TrespassShooting from a roadside, lay bay or on a public path that has right of way through a field is fine but don't venture on to someone's land without asking permission first.
2. When To Photograph Them?
In some places, lambs are starting to appear in fields now and if the farmer started lambing early, some start in December, they should be starting to become more active which will give you the chance to capture more interesting shots.
Dull days might not be your favourite time to head out into the countryside, however, days like this can give the best sort of light which makes grass appear saturated and you'll be able to see plenty of detail in the lamb's coat.
3. Wrap Up Warm
Even though we do get sunny days, it's still rather cool out there and when you're standing around for lambs to move a little closer to you, you'll soon start to feel the cold if you're not dressed correctly. Sheep are generally very wary of people so once they've done a runner, it can take them quite some time to build up the confidence to come and graze near you again.
4. Find One Subject
If possible, zoom in and focus on just one lamb. Not only will this give you the 'ahh' factor but it'll also give your shot more impact. Your shot must be sharp and exposed well and if you can, use a wide aperture to throw the background out of focus so nothing distracts the eye away from the lamb.
Getting down to the lamb's level can give a more interesting viewpoint, however, you need to pay more attention to the background – posts growing out of heads is never a good look and other items can just be distracting.
If you're subject's slightly older, they'll have more energy and will be braver so are more likely to be jumping around. Adding a small amount of blur to your action shots with slower shutter speeds can work well but don't go too slow as you still need to be able to see what your subject is.
5. Group Shots
Singling out one lamb can be tricky in a field full of sheep so if you struggle, go for the group shot instead. Look for interesting patterns and formations the sheep create and if get a small cluster of sheep together, wait until they're all looking your way and snap the shot.
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Photo Paper Names Are Mostly Marketing. Here's What Actually Matters
Choosing the right paper for your inkjet prints is more complicated than most people expect, and most of the confusion comes from marketing language, not actual technical differences. Understanding what paper names actually mean, and what's really inside the box, can save you money and frustration.
Samyang AF 35mm F1.8 P FE Strengthens Prima Series with Compact Everyday Lens
Image Credit: LK Samyang
LK Samyang has launched the AF 35mm F1.8 P FE, the latest lens to join its growing Prima Series lineup. Tailored for hybrid creators who prioritize mobility without sacrificing image quality, the lens packs a bright F1.8 aperture, advanced 10-element optics, Linear STM II autofocus, and weather sealing into a lightweight body with a 62mm filter thread. Rounding out its feature set are UMC II coating for cleaner shots in tricky light and USB-C support for straightforward firmware updates. UK availability is anticipated toward the end of April.
From LK Samyang:
LK Samyang, a global leader in optical innovation, proudly announces the launch of the AF 35mm F1.8 P FE, a new addition to the Prima Series designed for hybrid creators and everyday photographers. The latest addition to the Prima Series builds on the momentum established with the launch of the AF 35mm F1.4 P FE in 2024, followed by the AF 16mm F2.8 P FE and AF 85mm F1.8 P FE in 2025. Guided by a commitment to portability, practicality, and ease of use, the Prima Series is designed to meet the needs of modern creators. Each lens in the lineup combines a compact, lightweight form factor with dependable optical performance, making them well-suited for both photography and video applications. Continuing this vision, the AF 35mm F1.8 P FE delivers a versatile, everyday shooting solution—offering an ideal balance of image quality, portability, and creative flexibility.
A Versatile 35mm Lens for Everyday Creativity
The 35mm focal length is widely valued for its natural perspective and versatility, making it ideal for everything from street and travel photography to portraits and cinematic content. The AF 35mm F1.8 P FE is designed as a practical everyday lens, combining a bright aperture with a compact, lightweight design and reliable autofocus performance. Offering a more portable alternative to the AF 35mm F1.4 P FE, it delivers an excellent balance of image quality and mobility - perfect for creators on the go.
Image Credit: LK Samyang
Key Features
Compact and Lightweight Design
Designed for everyday carry, the AF 35mm F1.8 P FE features a compact form with a 62mm filter size, pairing seamlessly with lightweight full-frame cameras for travel, street, and hybrid shooting.
Bright F1.8 Aperture
A fast F1.8 aperture delivers strong low-light performance and smooth, natural bokeh, making it ideal for both photography and video.
Advanced Optical Performance
A 10-element design, including aspherical and XHR elements, ensures sharp resolution and reduced aberrations in a compact build.
Image Credit: LK Samyang
Enhanced Coating Technology
UMC II coating minimizes flare and ghosting, delivering improved contrast and clarity in challenging lighting conditions.
Fast, Quiet Autofocus
Powered by Linear STM II, the lens offers quick, precise, and silent autofocus for both stills and video.
Built for Real-World Use
Weather sealing and USB-C connectivity provide durability and easy firmware updates, supporting reliable performance on the go.
Craig Harrison, Senior Product Manager, Holdan, commented:
“I’m really excited about the latest addition to Samyang’s Prima series. The 35mm F1.8 delivers that ideal balance of performance and value, and with the stylish, contemporary design and feature-rich build of the Prima lineup, this new lens is sure to impress.”
Availability: Stocks are expected to start in the UK towards the end of April.
For more information, visit https://www.holdan.co.uk/brand/Samyang
7 Top Boat Photography Tips For When You're next By The Sea, A Lake Or River
- Standard zoom (35mm-80mm range is fine) – wide enough to get the whole boat in but long enough to focus in on the detail.
- Longer lens (80-200mm) - shoot small detail on boats further away.
- Polarising filter – reduce reflections on the water and in paintwork and deepen blue sky.
- Tripod - extra support when working on uneven surfaces such as wet sand.
Pick A Sunny Day
If you want to capture the postcard shot of colourful boats lined up, reflecting in the water while a bright blue sky frames them from behind you'll have to head out on a sunny day when there's not much of a breeze in the air so the water's still. Make sure you use a polarising filter to saturate the colours and enhance the sky.
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The Tide Is OutIf you get to the harbour and find the tide is out don't think you need to head for fish and chips while the water trickles back in. Instead, photograph the boats which are now stuck in the mud and take advantage of the mooring ropes which are now fully visible, using them as lead-in lines for your photograph. A small aperture is needed to ensure everything from the front of the rope to the distant boat(s) or other objects are sharp.
Don't Clutter Your Scene
Harbours are bursting with photographic potential but don't make your scene too busy. If you can, single out one boat and place it near the foreground of your shot as this will give the photo more impact and will certainly be better than a shot of several boats that are fighting for your eye's attention.
Further Inland
Away from the coast, you'll still find plenty of boats on canals, rivers and in reservoirs waiting to be photographed. Canals create leading lines that will help with composition while the winding curves of a river will guide the viewer through the image to a boat making its way through the bends. If there's a bridge find a position where you can use it to frame a boat passing under it, just watch your exposure as the light under the bridge will be lower than the outside and it's easy to end up with a shot that's underexposed if the camera's meter reads from the brighter part of the scene. Switch to spot metering where possible, taking a meter reading from the sidewall of the bridge and use that as the starting point.
Activities On And Around The Boat
Barges found on canals are often very colourful and feature flower pots and other accessories that are worth a quick snap. Just remember to use a wide aperture to blur the background. Round the harbour, you can crop in on sails, boat hulls, lifebuoys and fishing nets.
Action
For those who like things to be a little more fast-paced head for a water-sports centre where water-skiing, jet-skiing and other adrenalin-pumping activities take place. A camera which has fast autofocus will help you capture action shots where your subject is pin-sharp. A little blur in the background can enhance the sense of movement/speed in your shots, however.
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