7 Creative Principles From Brian Eno That Photographers Need
Choosing a single focal length and following rigid systems might feel like the opposite of creativity, but Brian Eno built a career proving otherwise. His framework for making music turns out to map almost perfectly onto how the best street photography work gets made.
Viltrox 35mm f/1.2 Lab II: Sharpest Budget 35mm Lens You Can Buy Right Now?
Choosing a 35mm lens for wedding and portrait work is genuinely difficult when the options range from compact primes to heavier, more ambitious glass. The Viltrox AF 35mm f/1.2 Lab II lands squarely in that debate, and it's making a strong case for itself.
Nikon ZR Tested on a Real Road Trip: Is It Worth Carrying All Day?
Picking the right cinema camera for run-and-gun work is rarely straightforward, and the Nikon ZR raises real questions about whether its feature set justifies its size and complexity for everyday shooting. This video puts that to the test not on a studio set or controlled shoot, but on a full movie-location road trip through Flagstaff, Arizona.
Why the 24-70mm f/2.8 Should No Longer Be the Default First Zoom Purchase
The 24-70mm f/2.8 has been the default first professional lens purchase for at least 25 years. Almost every working photographer has owned one. Every photography forum recommends one to every newcomer asking what to buy after the kit lens. Every wedding educator names it as the foundation of a working kit. Every camera store stocks it at eye level. The lens has been so culturally dominant within working photography that the question of whether it should still be the default has rarely been asked seriously. It should be asked now.
This Is One of the Stupidest Cameras Ever Made and I Love It
If you dream of owning a Hasselblad XPan, you might want to consider this much more affordable alternative. Or, given how stupid it is, maybe not.
Review of the New Laowa CF 4.5-10mm f/2.8 Fisheye Zoom
The Lighting Secret: How to Create Epic Light Anywhere
The biggest hurdle many photographers face when jumping into off-camera flash isn't the gear or the settings; it's the "where." We often find ourselves in a beautiful location with boring light, and we struggle to know how to fix the issue. If you've ever looked at a scene and felt stuck because the lighting didn't match your vision, the solution isn't more gear. The solution is learning how to "see" light patterns and then recreating them from scratch.
Why Your ISO Obsession Is Hurting Your Photos
Choosing the right ISO setting is one of those decisions that quietly shapes every photo you take in low or mixed light. Get the thinking wrong, and you either miss the shot or spend years avoiding conditions that could actually produce your best work.
Why "Boring" Locations Might Be Better for Your Photography
Choosing a camera system and committing to a focal length are decisions most serious shooters obsess over, but this approach to both is refreshingly straightforward. After 18 years of shooting, burning out, stepping away, and coming back, this perspective on gear, creative ruts, and where to find compelling images cuts through a lot of the noise.
Lumix L10 vs. Fujifilm X100VI: Which $1,500 Compact Actually Delivers?
The Lumix L10 is a compact camera built around a 26 MP Micro Four Thirds sensor, a fixed Leica-branded zoom lens, and a spec sheet that will make you question whether Panasonic even knows how to make a simple camera. At $1,500, it sits in a crowded space occupied by cameras like the Fujifilm X100VI, and the question worth asking is whether it can hold its own.
Thypoch 24-50mm f/2.8: Half the Price of Sony's Version, But Is the Image Quality There?
Thypoch built its reputation on manual focus prime lenses, so when the company announced an autofocus zoom, nobody saw it coming. The Thypoch 24-50mm f/2.8 is not only the brand's first zoom lens, it's the first autofocus zoom lens to come out of China entirely, and it lands at $619 on Sony E-mount, undercutting the Sony 24-50mm f/2.8 G by roughly half.
Photography Is Dead, Long Live Photography
More cameras, fewer photographers. As this new day dawns outside my window, I pose a simple yet profound question: Is there still truth in photography?
Damn you, Eddie.“People believe them, but photographs do lie, even without manipulation. They are only half-truths.”
Eddie Adams said that. You can read it for yourself in his 1998 short-piece Eulogy: GENERAL NGUYEN NGOC LOAN for Time Magazine.
That particular handful of words have rattled around in my head since the first reading. It's like some bad connection dialing up a phone call across time.
There Might Just Be a Disconnect Between Camera Manufacturers and Market Demands
As with every fast-paced, tech-driven industry, the cycle time for each incremental update in photography equipment seems to get shorter and shorter. Though it has become better for the past few years, each product launch is still not given sufficient time to mature before the next iteration is shoved down our throats. While this might contribute to a better-looking balance sheet from a business standpoint, in the long run, it might lead to a massive disconnect between what camera manufacturers are building and what the market actually demands.
Why "Less Perfection, More Human" Is the 2026 Photography Trend That Will Last
Photography has spent most of its digital era chasing technical perfection. Sharp focus, clean files, controlled lighting, smooth skin, perfect exposure across the dynamic range. The pursuit was reasonable. Each generation of cameras and editing software made these standards more achievable, and working photographers who failed to meet them risked looking unprofessional. By 2020, a wedding photographer delivering a slightly soft image was apologizing for it. A portrait photographer leaving visible skin texture was risking client complaints.
The Geometry of Indifference
There is a kind of photography that pretends to be neutral. Flat surfaces, clean lines, ordinary spaces. Nothing dramatic, nothing loud, nothing that asks to be looked at twice. It's often dismissed as cold, detached, even empty. But that reading is too easy. What we call indifference is rarely indifference. It is a position.
How to Make Digital Photos Look Like Film in Lightroom
Film photography costs money at every step, and if you shoot both film and digital, keeping a consistent look across both can be a real headache. Knowing how to replicate that film aesthetic in post gives you control over the final result without being locked into a single workflow.
Canon RF 20-50mm f/4L IS USM PZ: The Compact L-Series Zoom Canon Shooters Have Been Waiting For
Canon's new RF 20-50mm f/4L IS USM PZ covers ultra-wide to standard focal lengths in a compact, lightweight body with a powered zoom and optical stabilization. At around $1,400, it sits in a competitive price bracket where Canon already has some well-established options.
Sony FE 100-400mm f/4.5 G Master Review: Is the Constant Aperture Worth the Price?
The Sony FE 100-400mm f/4.5 G Master is Sony's answer to what a professional telephoto zoom should look like when price is no object. At roughly $4,300, it sits in a category where the competition is thinner and the stakes are much higher.
The Problem With Fisheye Portraits (And How the Sigma 15mm f/1.4 Fisheye Fixes It)
Most photographers will tell you the same thing: don't use a fisheye for portraits.
It distorts faces. It bends lines. It makes people look weird. And honestly, they're not wrong.
But they're also not thinking about it the right way.
For one of our recent shoots, we built an entire portrait concept around the Sigma 15mm f/1.4 DG DN Diagonal Fisheye | Art. Not in spite of what it does, but because of it. Instead of trying to control or minimize distortion, we designed everything to work with it.
Canon R6 V vs. R6 Mark III: Which One Should You Actually Buy?
The Canon EOS R6 V sits in a genuinely interesting spot in the lineup, and if you're trying to decide between it, the Canon EOS R6 Mark III, and the Canon EOS C50, the answer is not as obvious as Canon's marketing might suggest.
