Your First 30 Days With a New Camera: A Day-by-Day Learning Plan
You just bought a camera. Maybe it is a Canon EOS R50, maybe a Nikon Z50 II, maybe a Sony a6400 you found on sale, maybe a Fujifilm X-T50 that took three months on a waitlist. Whatever it is, you unboxed it, charged the battery, took a couple of test shots of your cat, and now it is sitting on the counter while you wonder what to do next.
Street Photography Is Dead. Smartphones Killed It and That’s a Good Thing
There's a sentence that keeps coming back in photography circles: street photography is dead.
Most people say it with nostalgia. Some say it with frustration. A few say it like a provocation.
They're all wrong. And right.
Street photography isn't dead because people stopped doing it. It's "dead" because everyone started.
The Real Problem Isn’t Death. It’s Saturation.We are producing more images today than at any other point in history. Every street corner, every passing gesture, every accidental juxtaposition: it's all being photographed, constantly.
Before You Call Yourself an Abstract Photographer
Many photographers produce abstract-looking images accidentally. Far fewer build abstract photography as a discipline.
Stop Guessing in Lightroom and Start Editing With a Plan
Many people approach editing by opening an image, applying a preset, and hoping for the best. That works occasionally, but more often it produces results that feel slightly off in ways that are hard to diagnose, let alone fix.
You Can Shoot Professional Model Portraits With a Phone. Here's How.
Shooting model portraits well has less to do with gear than most people assume, and everything to do with understanding light and how to pose a subject. Whether you're working with a phone by a window or a pair of strobes in a studio, the gap between a flat, forgettable shot and one that actually stops someone mid-scroll comes down to a handful of decisions you make before you ever press the shutter.
How Sharp Is the Viltrox 35mm f/1.2 STF N on Sony's Most Demanding Sensor?
The Viltrox 35mm f/1.2 is already a well-regarded fast prime, but Viltrox has now released a revised version called the AF 35mm f/1.2 STF N, dropping the LED display and swapping the old control ring for a proper aperture ring. If you shoot Sony E-mount and have been watching this lens, the changes are worth understanding before you spend $999.
Why Gerald Undone Is Walking Away From a Decade of Camera Reviews
YouTube has a burnout problem, and Gerald Undone just went public with his. After more than a decade of lab-style camera reviews, Undone announced he's stepping away from the format entirely. The conversation about why is more honest than most creators ever get on camera.
7Artisans Announces 35mm f/2.8 LTM Lens
There’s something surprisingly novel about making a new lens for a system that predates the governments of many modern countries. The Leica Thread Mount (LTM, also known as the M39 mount), born in the early 20th century wasn’t designed for firmware updates, autofocus motors, or clinical perfection. It was designed for walking. For looking. For getting close enough to feel like you were part of the scene rather than observing it from a safe distance.
Why So Much Art Photography Feels Historically Late
Many photographers produce carefully crafted images and still struggle to gain attention. The problem is rarely a lack of skill. In many cases, the photographs simply belong to an earlier photographic moment.
14 Hidden Costs of Being a Professional Photographer Nobody Talks About
When you calculate whether photography can support you financially, you start with the obvious math: how many sessions per month, times your session rate, equals annual income. That number looks promising. It is also wrong, because it does not account for the dozens of expenses that sit between your gross revenue and the money you actually take home.
Come With Me to The Photography Show in New York City
The Photography Show returns to New York City this week, presenting thousands of photographs available for purchase or viewing. The show is the oldest running event of its kind and presents a remarkable variety of photographic styles. It is worth a visit if you're in the New York City area this week.
Every New Lightroom Feature in April 2026
Adobe's April 2026 Lightroom update touches both Lightroom Classic and Lightroom, and the changes range from genuinely useful to head-scratching. If you batch-process photos or regularly move between Lightroom and Photoshop, at least a few of these updates will affect how you work.
Why Light Pollution Killed This Comet Shot at 4 a.m.
Comet PanSTARRS had a narrow visibility window, and Brent Hall had roughly 12 hours to pull together a shot. What followed was a scramble of location scouting, dead batteries, cactus needles in the leg, and a hard lesson about light pollution direction.
Why the Fujifilm X100VI Is the Best Compact Camera for Street Shooting
Compact cameras have exploded in popularity, and finding the right one is harder than it sounds when you're comparing genuinely capable options across very different price points and form factors. The Fujifilm X100VI sits at the center of that conversation right now, and for good reason.
The Canon Cinema EOS C50 After 6 Months: Is It Better Than the C80?
The Canon Cinema EOS C50 is a compact cinema camera aimed squarely at solo shooters and traveling videographers who want cinema-quality footage without hauling a full-size rig. If you already own a Canon Cinema EOS C80 and wonder whether the smaller body is worth the trade-offs, the answer is more interesting than you'd expect.
Picture vs. Photograph: Why the Difference Matters
Most of us overlook great images not because we fail to see them, but because we stop at thinking, "That's a nice picture." A picture serves as proof that you were present; a photograph shows you made deliberate choices. Here's how to transform quick snapshots into purposeful photographs, both in the field and during editing.
12 Signs Your Photography Has Plateaued and What to Do About Each One
A plateau does not announce itself. There is no notification, no error message, no dramatic moment where you realize you have stopped growing. It arrives quietly, disguised as comfort. You know your camera. You know your style. You know your workflow. Everything is efficient, consistent, and predictable. And that predictability is exactly the problem.
Lumix S 40mm f/2 Review: Compact Wonder or Autofocus Compromise?
The Lumix S 40mm f/2 is a compact full frame lens aimed squarely at keeping the Lumix S9 system small and pocketable, and it's the kind of release that makes a lot of S9 owners stop and pay attention. At $399, it sits at a price point where the tradeoffs actually matter, and knowing what they are before you buy could save you a lot of frustration.
Green Screen in a Garage: The Cinematic Visual Built With One Light and Zero AI
Shooting green screen in a small, unventilated garage in 90-degree heat is not the ideal setup. But the results you can pull off with basic gear, some problem-solving, and a willingness to look ridiculous in front of a camera might surprise you.
Sony FE 20-70mm f/4 G Review: The Zoom Most People Are Sleeping On
The Sony FE 20-70mm f/4 G is one of those lenses that doesn't get nearly the attention it deserves. Its focal range alone sets it apart from almost every other zoom on the market, and that's exactly what makes it worth a serious look.
