The Difference Is Clear as Day: We Review the New Viltrox 35mm f/1.8 II EVO
This isn't just another third party lens for your mirrorless camera. This new lens focuses (pun intended) not just on aiding the shooting process but even more so on delivering quality images.
Nikon Officially Teases New Line of Cinema Lenses
Nikon has just teased a first look at a brand-new line of cinema lenses. So what should we expect from the final reveal?
I was literally in the process of rigging up my Nikon ZR camera for a shoot with YouTube on for background noise when the algorithm surfaced a new video I wasn't expecting. Simply titled "A New Chapter Begins," the thumbnail gave away the secret. Well, part of the secret.
9 Things That Go Wrong on Every Landscape Photography Trip and What to Do About Each One
Landscape photography looks serene from the outside. A lone figure on a hillside, tripod silhouetted against a sunrise, communing with nature. What the Instagram post does not show is the two-hour predawn drive, the boots soaked through before the first frame, the sky that refused to cooperate, and the 200 exposures that produced three usable images. Landscape photography is not a passive activity. It is an ongoing negotiation with an environment that does not care about your shot list.
Sharp and Smartly Priced: We Review the Viltrox 55mm f/1.8 EVO
The nifty fifty has earned its reputation as the go-to standard prime, but the Viltrox 55mm f/1.8 EVO feels like a quiet refinement of that formula. Just a 5mm shift in focal length is enough to change how you see and compose a scene. After testing the new Z mount variety on location, the quality of this lens becomes clear.
We Review the Ultimate Precision Tripod: Rogeti T32MAX With C32GK + RG-1 Geared Center Column and Head
It has been a long time since I felt genuinely excited about a tripod and gear head, mainly because this segment of the industry has felt largely stagnant.
Why Photographers Talk About Gear (And What We Should Talk About Instead)
Sit down with almost any photographer these days, and the conversation goes one of several ways: camera specs, gear rumors, and the perennial question: "What are you shooting with?" What would happen if we changed that conversation to something more?
Stop Editing Photos Without Asking This First
Shooting in thick sulfur smoke with burning eyes and barely enough air to breathe, Mitchell Kanashkevich still managed to walk away with images that communicate something real. Most edits of a scene like that end up feeling like nothing, and the reason almost always comes down to one flawed habit that's remarkably easy to fix.
Spot Metering Is the Most Misunderstood Mode on Your Camera
Exposure metering is one of those fundamentals that separates guesswork from consistently well-exposed images. Even with today's sophisticated camera systems, knowing how your camera reads a scene and when it gets it wrong changes how you shoot.
How a Cell Tower Worker Became a Professional Nature Photographer
Picking a photography niche on Instagram or Facebook right now is an uphill battle. The platforms are flooded, and standing out as a working photographer takes more than great images.
One Desert Location, Three Different Days, Completely Different Images
Shooting the same desert location across multiple days and radically different conditions is one of the best ways to push your landscape work forward. This Arizona desert shoot is a masterclass in staying adaptable, and the images prove that preparation and flexibility matter far more than waiting for the perfect moment.
Inserting Products Into Existing Photos With AI: What Actually Works
One of the more practical uses I've found for AI in photography is product placement — specifically, dropping a product into a photo you've already taken. Not generating a scene from scratch, but salvaging or extending a shoot you already have.
Title: Pentax 645 vs Mamiya M645 1000S: Which 645 Film SLR Should You Buy?
If you're trying to choose between the original Pentax 645 and the Mamiya M645 1000S, you're not really asking about features. You're asking which one will make your portraits and landscapes look the way you want.
I shot both systems with my favorite focal lengths — Pentax 45mm and 55mm, Mamiya 75mm and 150mm — and what surprised me wasn't sharpness. It was behavior. One camera encouraged speed and familiarity. The other made me simplify and commit.
10 Summer Photography Projects You Can Finish Before September
Summer is the easiest season to photograph and the hardest season to use well. The light is long, the weather cooperates, and the subjects are everywhere. But without a specific project to anchor your shooting, those three months dissolve into a scatter of random images that do not add up to anything.
The Fujifilm GFX100RF Might Be the Best Travel Camera You're Not Considering
Choosing a camera to pack for a spontaneous train trip sounds simple until you realize your heavier kit is the reason you leave it at home. The Fujifilm GFX100RF sits in an unusual position: 100 megapixels, medium format, and small enough to slip into a daypack without a second thought.
The Real Reason Your Travel Photos Don't Match the Moment
Most travel photos disappoint not because of bad gear, but because of bad decisions made before or during the trip. If you've ever come back from a trip with hundreds of images and only a handful that actually capture how it felt to be there, the problem is almost certainly in the planning, or the lack of it.
The Ethics Problem No One in Travel Photography Wants to Talk About
Staging photos and calling them documentary work isn't a gray area. It's a breach of trust, and it's happening more visibly in travel and humanitarian photography at a moment when the credibility of the entire medium is already under strain.
The "Best Camera Settings" Advice That's Keeping Your Photography Mediocre
Knowing your camera's settings inside and out won't make you a better photographer. Composition, observation, and the ability to see a shot before you take it will, and those are skills that have nothing to do with aperture priority or scene modes.
9 Things I Wish I Knew Before I Bought My First "Serious" Camera
I bought a Canon 7D because it had a bigger number than the 6D, more autofocus points, and a faster burst rate. I thought I was buying the better camera.
What I did not understand was that the 6D's larger sensor would have given me cleaner high-ISO performance, shallower depth of field, and better dynamic range, all things that mattered far more for the portraits and low-light work I actually wanted to shoot. The 7D was excellent. But I bought it for the wrong reasons. If I could go back and sit down with myself the week before that purchase, here is what I would say.
Sharpness Is the New Beige
We finally reached a weird point in photography where sharpness isn't even a goal anymore; it's given. Modern lenses are so good that "tack sharp" is basically a factory setting. And yet, scroll any comment section, and you would think sharpness is a whole sport. Not light. Not timing. Not mood. Just crazy sharp.
10 Lightroom Secrets That Will Change How You Edit Photos
Lightroom has more depth than most people ever tap into, and after 15 years of using it, Serge Ramelli has a clear sense of which techniques actually move the needle. These aren't beginner tips about sliders; several of them involve AI-powered masking tricks and a dodge-and-burn workflow that can fundamentally change the way a finished image looks.
