The Studio Lighting Tools Most Shooters Overlook
Shooting with a snoot or projector attachment unlocks a level of light control most setups simply can't match. Mark Wallace puts that to the test in a recent studio session, building off a lighting guide created by his colleague and then pushing into entirely original territory.
The Biggest Photography Stories of March 2026
March 2026 was one of those months where every corner of the photography world seemed to shift at once. From semiconductor crises driven by AI infrastructure to the Supreme Court declining to touch a pivotal AI copyright case, from the biggest camera trade show on the planet delivering almost no new cameras to Kodak rewriting the names of its most beloved film stocks, this was a month that will be remembered as a turning point. These ten stories captured the month.
Fstoppers Photographer of the Month (March 2026): Igor Butskhrikidze
The Fstoppers community is brimming with creative vision and talent. Every day, we comb through your work, looking for images to feature as the Photo of the Day or simply to admire your creativity and technical prowess. In 2026, we're featuring a new photographer every month, whose portfolio represents both stellar photographic achievement and a high level of involvement within the Fstoppers community.
A Guide to 50mm vs. 85mm Lenses: Choosing Your Focal Length
If you were stranded on an island, or perhaps more realistically, dropped into the bustling streets of Jakarta or a temple in Bali, and could only choose one prime lens, which would it be? The 50mm or the 85mm? Let's find out.
It is one of the most debated questions in photography. Both lenses are legendary in their own right. The 50mm is the storyteller, the lens that sees the world roughly as you do. The 85mm is the isolator, the lens that flatters subjects and melts away distractions.
Canon RF 16-28mm f/2.8 STM: Is the Distortion a Dealbreaker?
The Canon RF 16-28mm f/2.8 STM is one of the more interesting ultra-wide angle zoom lenses Canon has released in recent years, sitting at a price point that's hard to categorize. It's not cheap, but it's marketed as the budget option in Canon's lineup, which raises an obvious question: what exactly are you giving up?
Why the Best Portrait Photographers Specialize in One Thing and Ignore Everything Else
Choosing a specialty in portrait photography isn't just a stylistic preference. It's a business decision. The photographers who build sustainable careers aren't necessarily the most technically gifted; they're the ones who commit to a recognizable style and understand the world around their images, not just the camera settings.
AI Fake Real Estate Photos Are Fooling Buyers and Breaking California Law
AI-generated real estate listing photos are showing up on major property websites, and buyers have no way to tell they're fake. In California, a law requiring disclosure already exists, and agents are still ignoring it.
Old School vs. New School: How Generations Actually Differ as Photographers
Shooting film in an era of instant digital feedback isn't a step backward; it's a deliberate choice that exposes real differences in how generations approach the craft. Understanding those differences can sharpen how you think about your own photography, regardless of which tools you use.
Behind Every Choice Is a Compromise — and Creativity Pays the Price
Compromises, as I would describe them, are simply the consequences of decision-making. And it is something we don't talk about enough, especially in the photography industry. As much as we like to paint a beautiful picture of our creative journey, the truth is that we can't have everything laid out perfectly without accepting compromises, unless we are living somewhere over the rainbow or have unlimited skills, time, and resources. Practically speaking, neither makes much sense.
10 Lightroom Mistakes That Are Ruining Your Photos
Lightroom is the most widely used photo editing application in the world, and for good reason. It is powerful, nondestructive, and flexible enough to handle everything from a casual vacation gallery to a professional wedding shoot. But that flexibility comes with a cost: there are dozens of ways to make your images look worse instead of better, and most of them feel like improvements while you are doing them.
Nikon Z5 II Real-World Review: Is This the Best Value Full Frame Camera Right Now?
The Nikon Z5 II sits at the entry-level end of Nikon's full frame mirrorless lineup, but calling it "entry-level" undersells it fast. This camera carries specs that would have turned heads on a flagship body just a few years ago, and at its price point, it's hard to ignore.
The Best Beginner Film Stocks for Color and Black and White
Picking the wrong film stock can ruin an entire roll before you ever press the shutter. ISO, light conditions, and your specific camera's limitations all play into which film actually makes sense for a given shoot, and getting this wrong costs you both money and photos.
Saramonic Air SE Review. The Best Cheap Wireless Microphone For iPhones
I’ve used a ton of wireless systems over the years, and consistently, Saramonic tends to deliver some of the best range and audio quality. What shocked me here is that this is their smallest and cheapest system yet at just $49, and somehow it still holds up.
Getting Started With Portrait Lighting: 4 Classic Patterns Explained
Lighting is one of those skills that separates snapshots from professional-looking images. Whether you're working in a studio or improvising at home, understanding these four classic lighting patterns gives you a repeatable, reliable system for flattering almost any subject.
The Raw Editing Workflow That Actually Looks Like Film
The Fujifilm X100VI has become one of the most talked-about compact cameras in recent years, and for good reason. It fits in your pocket, goes anywhere, and produces files that can genuinely be pushed toward a 35mm film aesthetic without much fighting.
The Peak Design Travel Collection: Do They Fit in a Photographer's Rotation?
Peak Design has announced their recent travel collection, featuring four different bags including two different sizes of backpacks, a crossbody bag, and a weekender duffel-style bag. These bags are designed with travel in mind, but can they work for photographers as well?
13 Signs Your Photography Website Is Costing You Clients
Slow load times. No clear pricing page. A portfolio organized by date instead of genre. These are the silent killers that drive potential bookings away before a visitor ever reaches your contact form. Your website might be gorgeous to you, but if it's not converting visitors into inquiries, something is broken, and it's probably one of these things.
Viltrox 50mm f/1.4 Pro: Character, Weight, and a Lot of Value
I am essentially a one-man photo department for a 135-year-old newspaper. On top of that, I shoot portraits and events professionally, and have for over a decade.
Gear doesn't sit on a shelf for very long. It has to put in work and earn its keep.
I used the Viltrox 50mm f/1.4 Pro on actual client shoots and photojournalism work over several months. Here's what stood out.
The $1,500 Camera Nobody Knew Existed
The Sony C200X is a 4-megapixel digital camera from 2004 that almost nobody outside of a post office or print shop has ever touched. It was built for one job: taking passport photos, and it did that job well enough that some of these are still in active use today.
