The Free App That Navigates Perfectly With Zero Cell Signal
If I told you that there was a free app that allows you to navigate flawlessly without needing a cell signal, you'd be interested, wouldn't you? Given that I am a night photographer who frequently navigates in the dark, this is particularly useful. I wanted to share this in case it helps you as much as it has helped me.
My Previous Attempts at NavigationI use Google Maps with downloaded maps for day-to-day driving directions. It generally works well for this.
11 Things Photographers Say vs. What They Actually Mean
Photography has its own language. Not the technical kind (though that exists too, and nobody outside the profession knows what "expose to the right" means). This is the diplomatic kind. The professional euphemisms we deploy to navigate awkward situations, avoid confrontation, and preserve client relationships while internally screaming at a volume that would alarm nearby wildlife.
The Real Differences Between Sony, Fujifilm, and Leica That No Spec Sheet Will Tell You
Choosing between the Sony a7CR, the Fujifilm X100VI, and the Leica Q3 43 is not a simple spec-sheet decision. These three cameras sit in roughly the same tier within their respective brands, but they represent completely different philosophies about what photography should feel like.
Panasonic Lumix TZ300 Review: The Best Compact Zoom You Can Actually Buy New
The Panasonic Lumix TZ300 lands in a market where its closest rivals are seven years old and increasingly hard to find. Whether that makes it a smart buy or a missed opportunity depends on which tradeoffs you're willing to live with.
Four Mistakes That Make Your Film Photos Look Amateur
Shooting film for a decade gives you a clear view of what separates a polished image from one that looks like it came from a beginner. The culprit is almost never the camera or the film stock itself; it's a handful of repeatable mistakes that are completely fixable once you know what to look for.
Handholding a Telephoto Lens Wrong Is Costing You Sharp Wildlife Shots
Handholding a long telephoto lens is one of the fastest ways to come home with a memory card full of soft, blurry shots. Even small movements get amplified at long focal lengths, and if your technique is off, no amount of image stabilization will fully bail you out.
Hohem iSteady MT3 and MT3 Pro Review: One Gimbal to Rule Them All?
Hohem, a global leader in intelligent imaging and stabilization technology, has long focused on empowering creators through precision engineering and smart design. They are also among the first to pioneer AI tracking in gimbal technology. The latest Hohem iSteady MT3 and MT3 Pro represent the brand's vision of an all-rounder, multipurpose gimbal designed for professionals who need flexibility across different shooting scenarios.
Compact, Convenient, and Complete: Saramonic Air SE Review and Demo
Simplicity has an undeniable charm, especially when it comes to setting up for filming. This new, thoughtfully designed wireless microphone from Saramonic offers exactly that.
UGREEN’s Thunderbolt™ 5 Docking Stations Are Here and We Take an Exclusive Look
Just when you thought Thunderbolt™ 4 was fast, here comes the new generation that takes it further. UGREEN's new docking stations offer to upgrade your workflow if you're up for it.
The Only 5 Camera Settings That Actually Matter for Beginners
If you're new to photography, you might feel overwhelmed by the variety of settings and controls on your camera. But don't worry, there are only a few you actually need to worry about.
What Happens to Your Photos When You Die and What to Do About It Now
Most photographers spend years building an archive worth protecting, but very few have a plan for what happens to it after they die. Copyright, physical media, cloud accounts, and stock licensing don't sort themselves out automatically, and without a plan, decades of work can vanish or get tied up in legal chaos.
The Case for Slowing Down in Landscape Photography
Landscape photography has an intimidating reputation, built up by an industry of tutorials, workshops, books, and courses that treat it like a discipline requiring years of study. But this video makes a compelling case that most of that complexity is noise.
The 3-Step System for Accurate Interior Real Estate Colors
Getting white balance right in real estate interiors is harder than it looks. Competing light sources, colored walls, and reflective surfaces all pull your colors in different directions, and fixing it all globally in post rarely works.
MacBook Neo by the Numbers
There's been a lot of press about how the new MacBook Neo performs on one photo or video task or another, and largely the consensus has been that it can do a number of things, but not all things. Well, what does that mean in actual raw data?
5 Low Light Mistakes That Are Costing You Image Quality
Shooting in low light is one of the most technically demanding situations in photography, and a handful of bad habits can quietly ruin your results before you ever open an editing program. Most of these mistakes are easy to fix once you know what to look for.
Pushing Personal Boundaries With the Viltrox Vintage Z2 TTL On-Camera Flash
For as far as I can recall, I have always been somewhat skeptical about using flashes for my personal work, specifically the casual, street-documentary style shooting that I tend to do whenever I simply feel like bringing a camera out. Ironically, when it comes to my commercial work, where everything is more controlled with purpose, I am not shy about using flashes to shape the lighting of the final image.
Laowa Sunlight 2x Full Frame Anamorphic Zoom Series Review
Recently, I got a chance to have a look at the brand-new Laowa Sunlight 2x FF Anamorphic Zoom Series and thought I'd share a thought or two.
Five Years Later, the Nikon Z9 Remains the Best Hybrid Camera on the Market
Today, I'm not talking about the newest camera on the market. But I'm talking about one of the best. And, in the end, that's kind of the point.
Doriyan Coleman Sees Poetry on the Streets of Cleveland, and He Has the Exhibition to Prove It
Doriyan Coleman is a Cleveland-based photographer, author, and educator whose work treats the everyday as something worthy of sustained attention. His street photography draws on themes of selfhood, community, and the quiet grandeur of the natural world, and the results feel less like documentation and more like visual verse.
How Contrast in Shape and Texture Can Replace Perfect Light
Shooting in bad light isn't a death sentence for your images. In fact, some of the strongest nature photographs come from conditions most people walk away from. Knowing how to read light, use contrast, and process with intention separates images that resonate from ones that just document a place.
