A Fanless Thunderbolt 5-Compatible SSD: My Time With the ORICO X50 Enclosure
Thunderbolt 5 is finally reaching real-world machines, and the enclosure market is catching up. The ORICO X50 is a new fanless option supporting TB5 compatibility, and after testing it out, I think it’s worth checking out.
The 7 Sharpest 85mm Lenses Tested: One Winner, Zero Easy Answers
Picking the sharpest 85mm lens on the market is harder than it sounds, because the gap between the top options is razor thin. Seven lenses made Christopher Frost's final cut, spanning a wide range of prices and maximum apertures, and the differences between them required serious pixel peeping to untangle.
Is the Free Adobe Alternative Ecosystem Finally Complete?
Adobe's subscription model has pushed a lot of creators to look for alternatives, and for years the honest answer was that nothing quite covered everything. That gap is now closing fast.
The Habit That's Making You Miss Shots While Traveling
Traveling forces hard decisions about what to photograph and when, and that pressure reveals habits you might not notice at home. Courtney Victoria's experiment in New Zealand puts one of the most common creative blocks in landscape photography under a microscope: the tendency to hesitate until the moment is gone.
Five Editing Mistakes That Make Your Bird Photos Look Fake
Bird photos that look fake, plastic, or AI-generated usually aren't a shooting problem. They're an editing problem, and the fix starts with recognizing exactly where things go wrong.
What 'Stops of Light' Means (And Why Photographers Won't Shut Up About It)
If you have spent any time reading about photography, you have encountered the word "stop" used in a way that makes no apparent sense. A lens is "two stops faster." A photo is "one stop underexposed." Image stabilization gives you "five stops of compensation." Somebody on a forum says they "opened up a stop and a half" and everyone nods like that means something.
Photographs That Stay: A Quiet Approach to Making Memorable Images
You know, there is a difference between a good photograph and one that stays. Not louder, not more dramatic, not even technically better. Just… harder to forget.
No Reflector, No Assistant: Making Harsh Light Work for Portraits
Shooting in harsh midday light near water is a situation where photos fall apart fast. Without a reflector or an assistant, that direct sun creates unflattering shadows and a dynamic range that's nearly impossible to manage in a single exposure.
What Happens When the Landscape Refuses to Cooperate
Shooting unfamiliar terrain forces you to adapt fast. When the dramatic mountain backdrops you rely on aren't there, the images you make either show your range or expose your limits.
How to Stop Losing Bookings: 5 Business Fixes That Actually Work
Booking weddings consistently is one of the hardest parts of running a photography business, and most of the problems aren't about your camera or your shooting skills. They're about how you're running your operation, and the fixes are more straightforward than you might expect.
Is Your Photography Too Perfect to Be Interesting?
Shooting the same iconic locations as everyone else is a trap most fall into without realizing it. This video makes a compelling case that the most memorable images aren't the ones that show everything perfectly; they're the ones that leave questions unanswered.
A Love Letter to the Disposable Camera
There is a specific feeling that I am going to try to describe, and I am not sure I will succeed. It is the feeling of being nine years old in 1996, holding a plastic Kodak FunSaver on a wrist strap, with the flash recycling and the little red ready light blinking on and off, knowing that I had 27 chances to take a picture and that I would not see any of them until my mom got the envelope back from the grocery store a week later.
Time To Try Film Photography? Forget an Expensive Leica M6, You Need a Cheap Nikon FM!
There was a moment recently when I realized the digital noise became too loud. Influencers and brands constantly talking about the latest technology and how it can improve your image quality. Menus became complicated. Firmware upgrades necessary. Increasingly faster eye-tracking and endless focus modes you never asked for. At some point, you start to miss something simpler—something quieter. Something that feels like photography again.
Cue film photography discussions.
And that's also when people—typically younger people—start telling you that you need a Leica.
Costco's Cheap Acoustic Panels Are Amazing
Whether you want to record clean audio, or you want a quite room to enjoy music in, room treatment is imperative and usually extremely expensive. Costco just brought the price way down.
Is a 50mm Prime Really All You Need for Portraits?
Choosing between a 35mm and 85mm prime for portraits is one of the most common debates in portrait shooting, and most people assume you need both. This video makes a strong case that a single 50mm prime not only covers the middle ground but can actually outperform the two-lens setup in more situations than you'd expect.
Staying Longer Than Necessary
I realized at some point that most of the photographs I was making came from leaving too early — not physically, but mentally.
10 Things Landscape Photographers Should Learn That Have Nothing to Do With Cameras
Improving as a landscape photographer has less to do with mastering technical settings and more to do with building the life skills that get you out the door, keep you in the field longer, and make your images mean something when you share them. These aren't camera skills. They're human skills that happen to make your photography better as a side effect.
Photoshop's AI Depth Masking Can Separate Your Subject From the Background With Surprising Precision
Selecting a subject in Photoshop has always required some combination of patience and compromise, but AI depth masking changes the math on that. Instead of identifying edges or colors, it reads the three-dimensional depth of your scene and lets you select based on where things actually sit in space.
What 50 Megapixels Lets You Get Away With on a Wide Angle Lens
Shooting architecture with a wide angle lens is harder than it looks. Converging verticals, contrast extremes, and the question of what clients actually want from your images all collide in ways that catch a lot of people off guard.
Behind the Scenes Shooting Both Photo and Video for E-Commerce Fashion
You all see the classic e-commerce shots on any fashion designer's website, but seldom do you get to see the full behind-the-scenes of what it takes to make them. Recently, I did an e-com photo and video shoot for a brand that I work with. Here is the process, how I lit it, how I shot it, as well as the overall behind-the-scenes look at what goes into a relatively simple shoot like this.
