Instagram's Optional AI Labels Are Worse Than No Labels at All
Instagram has started testing an "AI creator" label, an account-level badge that tells viewers a profile "posts content that was generated or modified with AI." It is clearer than the vague "AI info" tag Meta already sprinkles on some posts, and it reads like a step toward honesty in a feed increasingly clogged with synthetic images and video. There is one detail that undoes all of it. The label is entirely optional.
The 3 Sharpest Pancake Lenses Worth Owning
Pancake lenses are a niche obsession, but they solve a real problem: full-size image quality in a package small enough to actually carry. Most of them cut corners on sharpness to hit that tiny footprint, but a handful genuinely don't.
Your Layer Mask Isn't the Problem: Here's What Actually Causes Hair Fringing
Fringing around hair and fur is one of the most stubborn problems you'll run into when cutting out subjects in Photoshop. No matter how clean your layer mask looks, switching to a new background can expose a halo of the original background color that ruins the shot.
Van Life in a Scottish Downpour: Gear, Condensation, and One Unexpected Waterfall
Shooting landscapes in the rain sounds miserable, and sometimes it is. But the difference between a wasted day and a productive one often comes down to how you adapt when conditions refuse to cooperate.
A Photo Almost a Decade in the Making
Photographing a tiny chapel on a rock off the northwest coast of Spain sounds straightforward until you factor in tides, unpredictable weather, and a composition that may or may not even be physically possible. The difference between a shot that works and one that doesn't here comes down to a very specific water level on one of the highest tides of the year.
How to Photograph From an Airplane Window (And Actually Get Good Results)
The view from a window seat at cruising altitude is one of the few genuinely unique perspectives available to anyone with a camera and a boarding pass. Mountain ranges, river deltas, coastlines, city grids, cloud formations, and weather systems reveal themselves at a scale and angle that no drone, helicopter charter, or hiking trail can replicate. The light at altitude behaves differently than it does on the ground: cleaner, less diffused by low-altitude haze, with color gradients at the horizon that shift from warm gold to deep indigo across a span of sky you cannot see from the surface
This $20 Camera Upgrade Will Change How You See Your Photography
The best camera upgrade you make this year isn't a new lens, side grip, or lens filter. This camera upgrade makes you a better photographer because it gives you more control over how you see.
Which Lens Wins the Micro Four Thirds Portrait Lens Shootout?
One of the benefits of the Micro Four Thirds system is that there are many, many lenses to choose from to get the job done. If that job is specifically portraits, look no further than this deep dive into almost a dozen of the options available for the system.
Why Great Photographers Steal
Growth in photography often feels like a series of overwhelming choices. We look at different genres and techniques, trying to find a starting point that feels right. But the most effective roadmap for development is found in a classic idea you've probably heard: great artists don't just copy, they steal.
Three Lightroom Classic Features That Will Change How You Edit Photos
Most Lightroom Classic users stick to the same handful of tools and never dig into what the software can actually do. The masking system alone, when used to its full potential, can give you precise, layered control over every part of an image that most basic edits can't touch.
Telling the Country’s History of Sanatoriums in Photo
While some of us were indoors spraying Windex on our groceries during the COVID-19 pandemic, others took the time to explore how to visually relate to that time through passion projects. Photographer and author John Lazzaro did just that, spending those years and then some exploring, photographically, the history of sanatoriums in the United States to produce his latest book, Sanatorium.
How to Straighten Leaning Buildings and Bent Trees in Lightroom Classic
Converging lines in photos of buildings and trees are one of those problems that seem minor until you can't unsee them. Lightroom Classic's Transform tool can fix most of them in minutes, and knowing how to use it correctly saves you from spending thousands on specialized glass.
Field Testing The Nikon NIKKOR Z 70-200mm f/2.8 VR S II
Today, I'd like to have a chat about Nikon's latest version of its workhorse 70-200mm zoom lens, the NIKKOR Z 70-200mm f/2.8 VR S II.
The Nikon ZR Is a Surprisingly Good Walk-Around Camera
The Nikon ZR is built around the Nikon and RED collaboration, and on paper it looks like a specialist tool most people would pass on. But Matt Day's hands-on experience with it over several weeks raises real questions about whether it punches above its weight, even for everyday use.
Imagen Is Offering Full AI Editing Access for $10, Just in Time for Peak Season
Post-processing has long been the most time-consuming part of a photographer's workflow, and the numbers back that up. According to the 2026 Zenfolio State of the Photography Industry report, about 70% of photographers spend between 26% and 75% of their working time on editing. Only 5% of photographers surveyed feel they are managing the stress of running their business well.
Lightroom's QR Code Share Feature Makes Delivering Photos Effortless
Lightroom's share feature is one of those tools that sounds simple but has enough depth to change how you deliver photos to clients and subjects. If you photograph people and want them to walk away with easy access to their images, the built-in sharing and QR code system in Lightroom is worth understanding fully.
Peak Design’s Expanded Travel Line Is Here and We Took a Close Look
Everybody has different ways of traveling, and that's why bags, tripods, and even camera gear come in different shapes and sizes. Peak Design took note of that and has come out with more options.
A Fully AI-Generated Feature Is Premiering at Tribeca. The Industry Is Out of Excuses.
On June 10, during its 25th edition, the Tribeca Festival will premiere "Dreams of Violets," a docudrama feature in which every image and every person on screen was generated by artificial intelligence.
The Ultimate Everyday Carry Camera Bag: Atlas One
If you travel with camera gear even a few times a year, you already know the problem. Sometimes you're heading to a wedding with a full kit and your clothes are checked. Sometimes it's a weekend trip where you need a few lenses and room for a change of clothes. And sometimes you don't need any camera gear at all and you just want a normal bag. The issue is that most bags are built for one of those scenarios, not all of them. So you end up owning three or four bags and playing a guessing game before every trip.
The New Pelican CRATE Doesn’t Know It’s Built for Photographers
Modular. Configurable. Stackable. The Pelican CRATE system could be one of the most rugged photography gear cases on the planet, even if it doesn't realize it yet.
More Than a BoxA box is a box is a box. Right?
I'll admit that when Pelican shipped me their brand-new 90L CRATE case, my expectations were impossible to predict. That's not to say my expectations were low, but judging from the photos in Pelican's press packet, the CRATE system looked like, well, a big box.
How wrong I was.
