Why Buying New Gear Rarely Makes You a Better Photographer
I love G.A.S. (Gear Acquisition Syndrome). I really do. But being as "stony broke" as I am, I am very restricted in the purchases I can actually make. That being said, if I had the means, I would be up to my eyeballs in all the new shiny things. It's a siren song we all hear: "Surely if I just had this—insert arbitrary piece of gear here—my images would finally be the best."
Everyone Assumes the First Weather Satellites Used Film. The Real Story Is Far Stranger.
When Hurricane Camille filled the Gulf of Mexico in August 1969, satellites watched it the entire way in. The storm came ashore on the Mississippi coast as a Category 5 with sustained winds of 175 mph and a storm surge of more than 24 feet, and it killed more than 250 people. It would have killed many more if forecasters had not seen it coming from space. The Weather Bureau later estimated that the warnings and evacuations enabled by modern tracking and forecasting may have saved as many as 50,000 lives.
The Panasonic L10 Is the LX100 Successor Nobody Expected
The Panasonic L10 lands in a genuinely narrow space: a compact camera with a large sensor, a zoom lens, and serious video features. If you've wanted something between a Ricoh GR IV and a full-blown mirrorless kit, this camera makes a real case for itself.
Before You Contact a Single Client, Build These Foundations First
Trying to land photography clients before you're ready doesn't just waste your time, it burns opportunities you might never get back. First impressions with potential clients are permanent, and if you approach them too early, they won't come back even after you've improved.
The Frequency Separation Trick That Brings Back Skin Detail
Retouched skin that looks great up close but goes flat the moment you zoom out is one of the most common problems in portrait editing. There's a technique built into Photoshop's frequency separation workflow that can fix this, and most people walk right past it.
The Composition Fundamentals That Separate Good Photos From Forgettable Ones
Gear won't fix a bad composition. No matter how sharp your lens or how many megapixels your sensor has, if you don't understand how to arrange a frame, the image falls flat.
Bodyscape Photography: One Light Is All You Need for Dramatic Results
Bodyscape photography sits at the intersection of portraiture and abstract art, and it's more accessible than most people assume. With minimal gear and a basic understanding of light angles, you can produce images that look like they required a full studio production.
We Review the Neewer Q120 Outdoor Strobe Flash
The Neewer Q120 is a compact 120 Ws TTL pocket strobe aimed at photographers who want more power than a speedlight without carrying a full-size studio flash. After using it for outdoor portraits and location shoots, I found it surprisingly capable for its size. Compact and lightweight, the Q120 is clearly designed for outdoor and location shooting, but is it worth adding to your kit bag?
I Hate Tripods, But This One From Freewell Finally Changed My Mind
Yes, hate is a strong word, but it would be accurate in this instance. In the words of the great Dion DiMucci, "Here's my story, it's sad but true, about a tripod that I once knew." I think that was how the song went.
7Artisans 35mm f/2.8 M Mount: A Tiny Lens With Classic Rangefinder Charm
If you think the 7Artisans 35mm f/2.8 M Mount lens looks like it belongs to another era, you'd be quite correct. It was inspired by the compact optics used on Leica's early Barnack cameras in the 1930s. This tiny beauty, weighing just 88 g, embraces simplicity, portability, and character in a way that many modern lenses have forgotten.
The 5 Best Film Stocks for Beginners in 2026
Starting in film photography means making a choice before you ever press the shutter: which film to load. The wrong stock can make a beginner's early rolls frustrating and expensive, full of muddy colors and missed exposures. The right stock is forgiving, widely available, affordable enough to shoot freely, and consistent enough that you learn from your mistakes instead of wondering whether the film was the problem.
10 Ways to Get Sharper Photos With a Teleconverter
Teleconverters can quietly destroy your keeper rate before you even realize what's happening. Sharpness drops, autofocus consistency gets unreliable, and tracking falls apart — all from one small piece of glass between your lens and body.
The Two-Step Method for Making Any Photo Pop in Photoshop
Photoshop's Camera Raw filter is genuinely one of the most underused tools for color grading, and most people treat it like a raw file converter rather than a full editing engine. If you've been doing your color work purely in curves or Hue/Saturation, you're leaving a lot of control on the table.
Summer Portrait Editing in Lightroom Classic: A Complete Walkthrough
Summer light is some of the most challenging light to work with for portraits. It's bright, contrasty, and full of harsh shadows that flatten your subject instead of flatter them.
Why Consistent Street Photographers Beat Talented Ones
Street photography is genuinely hard, and most people don't tell you that upfront. Mike Chudley spent a year producing work that looked fine on Instagram but left him personally unsatisfied, and that tension between taste and ability is something most people never stop to examine.
The Canon EF 50mm f/2.5 Compact Macro Is 40 Years Old. Here's How It Holds Up.
Canon's oldest EF mount lenses are worth a second look now that they adapt so cleanly onto modern mirrorless bodies. The Canon EF 50mm f/2.5 Compact Macro is one of the more interesting cases: a lens from 1987 that regularly sells for under $100 on eBay and still communicates fully with current Canon R-series cameras, including in-body stabilization and in-camera corrections.
Skylum Adds Lightroom Library Import to Luminar Neo With a Caveat
There's a lot of competition out there for photographers' attention with recent updates of editing software. The big target for competitors is Adobe's ecosystem of programs, and many of my pro photographer friends are pretty locked in on Adobe Lightroom.
Today, Skylum released an update to Luminar Neo that will certainly gain some attention. With version 1.27.1, Luminar Neo gains the ability to import pretty much everything from your Lightroom collections. Here's how Skylum describes it:
Sleek, Durable, and Unassuming: We Review the Wandrd Prvke Zip Backpack
A lot of photographers nowadays prefer camera bags that are built to protect gear but barely look like it. This variation of Wandrd's Prvke backpack takes that to a whole new level.
The 10 Most Important Camera Settings: A Plain-Language Glossary for Beginners
A new camera presents you with hundreds of settings, and the manuals that explain them are written as if you already understand the vocabulary. You do not need to learn all of it. You need to understand about ten settings well, because those ten control almost everything about how your photographs turn out. Here is what each one does, in plain language, without the jargon that makes photography sound harder than it is.
When Experience Stops You From Seeing
Experience makes photographers faster by teaching them to recognize patterns. The same mechanism can also prevent them from seeing photographs that do not fit those patterns.
