How to Fire a Photo Client (and When You Should)
Nobody goes into photography hoping to turn away paying work. You spent months (or years) building a portfolio, learning your craft, and figuring out how to convince strangers to hand you money in exchange for images. Every booking feels like validation. Every cancellation stings. So the idea of voluntarily ending a client relationship, of looking at money on the table and walking away from it, feels counterintuitive at best and financially reckless at worst.
The Sony a7 Full Spectrum Conversion That Surprised Even an Infrared Veteran
Shooting infrared for nearly 20 years gives you a certain confidence about what to expect when you pick up a converted camera. A full spectrum converted Sony a7 is a different beast entirely.
The Sigma 15mm f/1.4 DC DN on APS-C Feels Nothing Like an Ultra-Wide Lens
The Sigma 15mm f/1.4 DC DN Contemporary looks to be another hit from the company. Here's what you can expect in real usage.
Photographing Dancers: What You Need to Know Before the Shoot
Dancers are among the most technically demanding subjects to photograph, and most of the challenge has nothing to do with dance knowledge. Understanding how a dancer's movement, positioning, and body lines interact with your camera, your light, and your background is what separates a compelling image from a wasted session.
The Panasonic GH7 or S1 Mark II? One Filmmaker's Honest Take After 6 Months
Choosing between the Panasonic Lumix GH7 and the Panasonic Lumix S1 Mark II is a real decision with a $1,400 price gap sitting between them. Both are flagship cameras aimed at the same kind of shooter, but sensor size, lens ecosystems, and how you actually work day-to-day push them in very different directions.
How to Land Your First Paid Photography Gig: A Step-by-Step Guide
The gap between "photographer with a portfolio" and "photographer with a client" feels enormous when you are standing on the wrong side of it. You have spent months learning your camera, building a body of work, and editing your images to a standard you are genuinely proud of. But nobody has paid you. And the longer that gap persists, the easier it becomes to convince yourself that the market is saturated, that you are not ready, or that real photographers get discovered rather than having to hustle for their first booking.
Attempting To Edit An Entire Wedding On Macbook Neo
After hearing that “no professional would ever use” a cheap laptop, I decided to test it. I edited an entire wedding, about 2,600 RAW files, on Apple’s budget MacBook Neo and compared it to a MacBook Pro. The twist: I let AI do almost everything.
Using Aftershoot, I automated culling, cropping, masking, and editing. The MacBook Pro finished in 52 minutes. The Neo took 3 hours 25 minutes. But that time difference barely matters when you’re not actually doing any work.
The World's Most Expensive Compact Cameras, Leica Q3 Vs Sony RX1R III
I’ve been testing the Sony RX1R III and Leica Q3 for three weeks, and it’s got me wondering: who is buying this type of camera?
Whether you’re a casual shooter or a professional photographer, you might be like me and not really understand this “genre” of cameras. These are compact, full-frame, fixed-lens luxury cameras. The Sony costs over $5,000 and the Leica over $7,000.
The Worst Photography Advice Isn’t Wrong—It’s Vague
Every photographer has heard it: use better light, tell the story, know your camera. None of that advice is wrong; most advice is just too broad, and it becomes useless. Are we giving photographers real guidance, or just repeating slogans?
How to Customize Your Photoshop Toolbar So It Actually Works for You
If you're learning Photoshop, the tools panel is where everything starts. Get it wrong or ignore it, and you'll fight the software every time you open it. Get it right, and the whole thing clicks into place.
How the Hasselblad X2D II Stacks Up Against the Sony a7R V and Leica M11
Shooting a real, paid elopement on a Hasselblad X2D II is a very different thing than shooting still life or controlled portraits with one. The autofocus questions, the low-light tradeoffs, the raw file quality compared to cameras like the Sony a7R V — those only get answered when you're actually working.
Adding Texture to Photos in Photoshop: A Step-by-Step Breakdown
Texture overlays can completely change the mood of a photo, and Photoshop gives you precise control over how they blend, how strong they appear, and whether the effect is destructive to your original image. Knowing how to layer multiple textures and then tie them together with color grading is the kind of workflow that separates polished edits from flat ones.
Wide Angle Zoom Mistakes That Are Silently Ruining Your Landscape Shots
Shooting wide angle looks easy until your photos come back flat, distorted, or full of tripod legs. The 16-35mm range is one of the most popular focal lengths in landscape photography, and it's also one of the most commonly misused.
Inside Lexar: How Memory Is Built, Tested, and Trusted
Like many digital creators, I've always justified paying more for quality memory, whether that be SD cards, CFexpress cards, or SSDs. Higher-end memory storage is faster, more reliable, and widely trusted. But I never really stopped to consider why that trust exists. That changed when I recently traveled to China to visit Lexar's facilities as part of their 30th anniversary. Seeing the process firsthand gave me a completely new perspective, and in this article, I will share what I took away from that experience.
Luminar Spring Update Introduces an Effortless Portrait Toolkit and New Universal Bokeh AI
In a significant update to Luminar Neo, Skylum is focusing on AI-based portrait tools, as well as improving some of the included masking tools. This update is version 1.27.
Is It the End of Street Photography as a Genre?
Street photography was built on proximity, on the unscripted moment when two strangers briefly shared the same space and the same gaze. In a world where every face is searchable, traceable, and legally accountable, that proximity no longer carries the same meaning.
How to Build a Photography Portfolio From Scratch (Even With No Clients Yet)
Here is the paradox that stops most aspiring photographers before they start: you need a portfolio to get clients, but you need clients to build a portfolio. It feels like a locked door with the key on the other side, and plenty of talented people quit before they figure out that the door was never actually locked.
How to Fix a Tricky Bird Photo in Lightroom Classic
Bird photos shot in dappled shade are some of the hardest to edit well. The exposure is tricky, green foliage casts color onto everything, and the subject can easily get lost in a busy frame.
Where to Share Your Photography Online: 8 Platforms Worth Your Time
Finding the right place to post your work online is harder than it sounds, and the wrong platform can mean your images get almost no attention or end up in murky terms-of-service territory. With so many options, it helps to have someone who's actually used them tell you what's worth your time.
How Lens Choice Determines the Story Your Street Photos Tell
Street photography lives or dies on story. A technically perfect shot of a stranger on the sidewalk means nothing if there's no narrative pulling the viewer in.
