Why Auto Mode Might Be the Most Professional Choice
Shooting in auto is normal. It is professional. The camera now takes over a technical layer that once demanded constant attention and experience. Exposure, white balance, tone mapping, and autofocus are handled quickly and with stable results. What used to require conscious monitoring now arrives as a reliable baseline. This does not mean the work disappeared. It means part of the work moved.
The 7 Sharpest 50mm Lenses You Can Actually Buy Right Now
50mm remains the most popular prime focal length for a reason: it sits in a natural middle ground, neither compressing like a telephoto nor distorting like a wide angle, which makes it the lens many reach for first. Christopher Frost has now tested over 70 different 50mm lenses, and with a wave of new options hitting the market, his original ranking needed a serious update.
Three Cameras Under $1,500: Which One Is Actually Worth It?
Finding a capable camera for under $1,500 on the used market is completely realistic right now, but the right choice depends entirely on what you're shooting. The gap between a dedicated photo camera, a video workhorse, and a true hybrid is wide enough that picking the wrong one is an expensive mistake.
DxO PureRAW 6 Is the Strongest Version Yet — Here's What's New and How to Use It
Raw files straight out of your camera carry noise, chromatic aberration, and lens imperfections that will follow your image through every step of post-processing. Running your files through a dedicated pre-processor before you ever open Lightroom gives you a cleaner foundation to work from, and the results compound as you edit.
Lighting Demo Reveals What 6 Different Modifiers Actually Do to a Subject
Lighting modifiers can make or break a photo, but most people learn about them by reading descriptions instead of seeing them work in real time. Watching how light wraps, falls off, and creates dimension on an actual three-dimensional subject is a faster path to understanding than any chart or spec sheet.
Do We Still Need to Treat Photography as a Profession?
Professional photography expanded under conditions of limited access, high risk, and irreversible failure. Those conditions no longer define most photographic tasks. As they collapsed, professional involvement narrowed to a much smaller set of requirements. What remains is a persistent mismatch between task complexity and professional scale.
Macbook Neo Vs $600 Windows Laptop
After comparing the new MacBook Neo to Apple’s Air and Pro, a lot of people asked the obvious question: what about Windows?
Yesterday I went to Walmart, bought a $659 Asus Vivobook, and tested it directly against the $600 MacBook Neo using the exact same real-world tasks.
Watch the video above to see the exact results of every test, but I'll summarize my findings below.
MacBook Neo ($600)Apple’s cheapest laptop continues to punch way above its price.
Pros
Let Your Creativity Bloom: Cover the Washington, D.C. Cherry Blossom Festival Like a Pro
Every year, the cherry blossom trees around the Tidal Basin and throughout D.C. bloom in a spectacular display of pink and white petals. These annual events provide an opportunity to create stunning landscapes and captivating portraits. In preparation for this year's National Cherry Blossom Festival, here are some tips and tricks to help get you up to speed on where to get the best shots and when to shoot.
Macbook Neo Vs Macbook Air Vs Macbook Pro
Apple just released the incredibly cheap Macbook Neo for $599 and you might be wondering what it's capable of. In this video I'll put it head to head against the Macbook Air, and Macbook Pro.
To see the results of each test, you'll need to watch the video above but I'll give you a quick summary of what I discovered.
MacBook NeoA18Pro, 8GB Ram, 256GB Storage, $599
This is easily the most surprising laptop of the bunch.
Pros
10 Unwritten Rules of Photography That Nobody Teaches You
Photography education has a blind spot. Workshops teach you exposure. YouTube teaches you composition. College teaches you history. But nobody sits you down and explains the professional norms that separate working photographers from talented hobbyists who can't figure out why clients aren't coming back. These aren't technical skills. They're behavioral patterns, the kind of knowledge that usually arrives the hard way, after a mistake you can't undo. Here are ten of them, collected so you don't have to learn each one at your own expense.
Lightroom's Lens Blur Filter Actually Works If You Use It the Right Way
Lightroom's lens blur filter got a bad reputation fast. When it launched, some people predicted it would make fast glass obsolete, and then it didn't, because on most real-world photos, cranking it up just looks fake.
Saying Hello From Your Grave: Finding Family Through Their Viewfinders
For many of us, photography has been an outlet for processing loss, grief, and our connection to humanity. One photographer takes us along his own journey in the literal footsteps of his ancestors — through the viewfinders of their very own cameras.
Three Personal Branding Looks from One Light: Here's How It Works
Shooting personal branding with a single light sounds limiting until you see what Lindsay Adler does with one modifier, a few small adjustments, and a corner of the room. The gap between a dramatic, shadow-heavy portrait and a soft, glowing high-key image can come down to nothing more than removing a grid and pointing a light at the ceiling.
Five Photography Myths That Are Quietly Limiting Your Portrait Work
Shooting portraits only during golden hour with an 85mm lens sounds like solid advice until you realize it's quietly limiting what you're capable of creating. This video breaks down five of the most common portrait photography myths and explains what to do differently.
The Real Reason Wedding Photography Feels So Overwhelming
Wedding photography stress is mostly optional. That might sound like a bold claim, but this video makes a compelling case that the overwhelming feeling most people associate with shooting weddings comes from gaps in preparation, not the job itself.
How to Convert the CHUZHAO Mini TLR to Infrared
The CHUZHAO Mini TLR was one of the most unexpectedly popular digital cameras to hit the consumer market in 2025. In this short video, I'll show you how to shoot infrared photography with this viral toy camera.
It was an undertaking completely devoid of logic outside all rational photographic understanding. I'm not sure what possessed me to attempt to use this tiny plastic camera for infrared photography. Much like the summit of Mount Everest, perhaps I wanted to undertake this ridiculous experiment simply because it was there.
Sharpness Beyond the Corners: We Review the Laowa 17mm f/4 Tilt-Shift Zero-D Lens
Tilt-shift lenses used to be rare and unattainable for most photographers. Back then it would cost an arm and a leg just to get one, but now Laowa has made it more available for almost every major camera system, and this new lens expands the available options.
6 of the Best Street and Travel Photography Shoulder Bags
Travel and street photographers need a bag—but something too big draws attention and can become a burden if it's on your shoulder and you're on your feet all day. The other option is a backpack, but they tend to be too big and bulky, and can become a nuisance when you're in a crowd. I can't tell you the number of times I've turned to take a shot and ended up knocking into someone with a pack on my back. The answer, then, is a very small shoulder bag or sling—so small and well-shaped you barely notice you have it.
How Aaron Anderson Built His Brand Through Instagram Collaboration
Aaron Anderson has built a career shooting for major corporations like Sony, Fujifilm, and Bosch through collaborations fostered on Instagram. Here's how he did it, and how you might too.
Aaron Anderson has an enviable career, shooting for notable clients like Sony PlayStation, Fujifilm USA, Monster Energy, Goorin Brothers, KTM, Tamron USA, Husqvarna, Rockstar Energy, Bosch Global, and others. He credits it all to "personal work" — shoots done on his own without pay.
10 Things Non-Photographers Say That Drive Us Crazy
Every photographer carries two things at all times: a camera and a mental catalog of phrases that make their eye twitch. These aren't insults. They're worse. They're delivered with complete sincerity by perfectly nice people who have no idea they've just committed a felony against your entire profession. What follows is a support group meeting in article form.
1. "You Must Have a Really Nice Camera."The classic. The original. The undisputed, pound-for-pound champion of photographer-annoying statements, undefeated since roughly 1987 and showing no signs of slowing down.
