Understanding ICM, Part Three: Legitimacy
The deficit of trust in ICM stems from an underdeveloped language of results. While we can describe how to move the camera, we lack the criteria to evaluate what has emerged. This final part addresses the legitimacy of formal photographic practice in a culture dominated by "image-as-statement" and examines why beauty, without a named visual task, is so easily reduced to a gimmick.
How I Photographed a France Football Cover in Mexico
What photographing Jennifer Hermoso taught me about editorial photography, trust, and why magazine covers still matter.
Magazine covers still matter.
That may sound almost old-fashioned in a time dominated by feeds, algorithms, and endlessly scrolling images that disappear seconds after being seen. Yet the magazine cover remains a strange exception. It still carries weight, it still feels curated rather than accidental, and perhaps most importantly, it still says something about the image selected to represent an entire story.
Aftershoot Just Became an Entire AI Photography Workflow
AI software for photographers is getting so good that it is both incredible and a little horrifying. Every few months, a new app claims it can save us time, but most of them still only handle one piece of the job. Aftershoot’s newest update feels different.
This is no longer just an AI culling app. Aftershoot can now cull, edit, retouch, export, create client galleries, and even help sell prints, all without needing to jump into Lightroom, Capture One, Photoshop, or a separate gallery service.
How to Set Up Back-Button Focus (And Why So Many Pros Swear by It)
Almost every camera you have ever used works the same way out of the box: press the shutter button halfway to focus, press it all the way to take the photo. One button, two jobs. It is so intuitive that most photographers never question it. You half-press, the camera focuses, you press the rest of the way, the shutter fires. Simple.
What Type of Photographer Are You, and Are You Sure?
Do you have problems defining yourself as a photographer? Do other people label you as a certain genre of photographer, but you feel that label is incorrect? If so, or even if you don't care about labels, this is a great video to make you think about what you shoot and why.
The Viltrox 90mm f/2.2 Evo Is Surprisingly Hard to Put Down
The Viltrox 90mm f/2.2 Evo is one of those lenses that shouldn't perform as well as it does at its price. At $369, it sits in territory where you'd normally make compromises on sharpness, autofocus, or build quality, and this lens largely refuses to do that.
Long Exposure Sunrise at Spurn Point Shows Why You Should Revisit Familiar Locations
Spurn Point is one of the most dynamic coastal locations in the UK, and right now it looks completely different from how it did just a few months ago. If you shoot long exposures on the Yorkshire coast, that change matters more than you might expect.
The In-Camera Multiple Exposure Technique That Turns Forest Photos Into Abstract Art
Multiple exposure photography sits at an interesting intersection of technique and abstraction, and the way you execute it in-camera versus in post produces genuinely different results worth understanding before you commit to one approach.
Sony a7R VI: The Upgrades That Matter and the Tradeoffs Nobody's Talking About
The Sony a7R VI sits at just under $5,000, and it's aimed squarely at shooters who want maximum resolution without sacrificing speed. What makes this camera unusual is that it manages to close the gap between high-resolution and high-speed shooting in ways the Sony a7R V simply couldn't.
Your Camera Is an Object. It Should Be a Beautiful One.
Somewhere in a closet or on a shelf, many photographers have a camera they love holding. Not because it has the best sensor or the fastest autofocus or the most impressive spec sheet, but because it feels right in the hand and looks right hanging from the neck. The texture of the grip. The color of the body. The glint off a machined aluminum dial when you tilt the camera in your hand. These are not specifications. They are qualities, and they affect how often the camera leaves the house, which is the only variable that determines how many photographs get made.
Why I Stopped Bringing Every Lens I Own Into the Landscape
There was a time when I believed being prepared for landscape photography meant carrying as much gear as possible.
If I was heading out for a sunrise shoot, I packed for every scenario I could imagine: multiple lenses, several filters, spare accessories, extra batteries, cleaning kits, backup bodies, heavy tripods, and anything else that might possibly become useful. I convinced myself it made sense because I did not want to miss an opportunity simply because I had left something behind.
In reality, all I was doing was making photography harder than it needed to be.
The Lie of Authentic Landscape Photography
"There's no way the scene looked like that when you took the picture. Show us the raw file." Have you ever had questions like these asked of you when sharing your work online?
From Beginner to Professional, These Tips Can Improve Your Images
It doesn't matter if you are a hobbyist or a professional photographer; everyone needs to reset and remind themselves of some simple truths of the genre from time to time. This video offers excellent advice that every photographer should consider whenever they pick up a camera.
The OM System OM-5 Mark II Gets Put Through a Brutal First Field Test
Picking the right weather-sealed camera for wildlife shooting in genuinely rough conditions is harder than it sounds, and most reviews don't test gear the way it actually gets used. Todd DeWald took the OM System OM-5 Mark II out for its first field session in 45-degree, rainy, wind-blown grassland conditions to find out exactly what this camera can handle before committing to a full month of testing.
The Real Reason Wildlife Shooters Switch From Primes to Zooms
Shooting wildlife with a 500mm prime is a commitment. The reach, the image quality, the background compression — nothing quite replicates it, but there are real trade-offs that push even experienced wildlife shooters toward zoom lenses over time.
Photographs About Things, Not of Things: A Church Shoot That Makes the Case
Shooting inside a historic church with nothing but available light sounds romantic until the sun moves and you're left in the dark. That's where Andrew Banner's video on shooting Wiggenhall Church in Norfolk gets genuinely useful.
How a Longer Focal Length Cuts Through a Chaotic City Background
Shooting street fashion in a busy city location is a real compositional challenge. The background competes with the subject, the light shifts constantly, and the difference between a clean frame and a cluttered one often comes down to one or two decisions made on the fly.
There Are Now Cameras in Earbuds. Photographers Should Be Thinking About What That Means.
Researchers at the University of Washington have embedded rice-grain-sized cameras into a pair of off-the-shelf Sony WF-1000XM3 wireless earbuds. The prototype, called VueBuds, captures low-resolution black-and-white images, transmits them over Bluetooth to a phone, and processes them through an on-device vision language model that can answer questions about whatever the wearer is looking at.
The Camera Market Is Shrinking. But That’s Not the Story.
Every few months the same narrative comes back: "The camera industry is dying." It sounds clean, dramatic, and easy to share. But the camera industry isn't really dying. It already lost 90% of its market and learned how to call it "stability."
The data from CIPA (Camera & Imaging Products Association) tells a very different story, a more complicated and, honestly, a more interesting one. Because yes, the camera market has collapsed compared to its peak, but it's not collapsing anymore in the way people think. It is reshaping.
Photography Is Not About Photography
Photography, despite what the internet has spent the last fifteen years trying to convince you, is not about photography. It is about life. Photography is simply what happens when life collides with awareness. The camera is not the source. It is the witness.
