Lumaprints: Where Quality and Affordability Finally Meet
Photographers print their work less often nowadays. It's not because they don't care; it is due to one fundamental issue: whom do you trust?
I love printing my work. It's the last step in the creative process, but this step can also become the most overwhelming. Why? It's because some internet sites promote themselves as the best printers for your work. Unfortunately, that is not always the case. Three printing companies struggle for every successful one. So who do you trust? Lumaprints.
Ten Questions with Landscape Photographer Erin Babnik on Gear, Museums, and When Fixing It in Post Isn't Cheating
Erin Babnik is known internationally as a part of the nature photography team Photo Cascadia. Her work grew from experiences as an art historian and archaeologist, photographing in museums and at archaeological sites throughout Europe and the Middle East. Here she discusses her must-have gear, the value of museums, and when fixing it in post isn't cheating.
Does Turning Your Photography Passion Into a Career Actually Ruin It?
Turning your passion into a career is one of the most debated decisions in creative work, and the answer is rarely as clean as either side makes it sound. Scott Choucino from Tin House Studio has been living this question for years, and his take is more nuanced than the usual "follow your dreams" pitch.
Photoshop's Brush Tool, Remove Tool, and Selection Features Explained in One Video
Photoshop has dozens of tools, but a handful of them do most of the heavy lifting in real editing work. Knowing how the brush, remove, and selection tools actually behave is the difference between fighting Photoshop and actually using it.
How to Decide If Your Photo Should Be Black and White
Knowing when to convert a photo to black and white is one of those decisions that separates a thoughtful edit from a forgettable one. Get it wrong and you strip out color that was doing real work; get it right and you reveal something the color was actually hiding.
How to Add Smoke to Your Photo Shoots Without Setting Off the Fire Alarm
Adding smoke to a shoot can completely change the feel of an image. It builds depth, amplifies drama, and when you're working with colored backlights, it's often the only way to make that color visible in the atmosphere rather than just on your subject's skin.
Why 28mm, 35mm, and 50mm Shaped the Way We Photograph Cities
In photography, style is often discussed in terms of subject matter, color, or composition. Certainly important aspects to consider, but much less frequently do we talk about something equally decisive: focal length. Yet if you look closely at the history of urban landscape photography, focal length reveals itself as a kind of quiet grammar.
The Real Reason Photographers Are Leaving Adobe
For most of the past decade, Adobe was not a choice. It was the default. Lightroom and Photoshop were where photographers learned to edit, where the workflows lived, where the presets came from, and where the entire industry quietly agreed to standardize. The price hikes were annoying. The subscription model was annoying. But the alternative was unthinkable, because there was no real alternative.
Tamron's 35-100mm f/2.8 Is a Different Kind of Standard Zoom: Here's the Tradeoff
The Tamron 35-100mm f/2.8 Di III VXD is a fast standard zoom for Sony E-mount and Nikon Z-mount cameras, priced at $899 for Sony and $929 for Nikon. That longer reach comes at a direct cost: you lose the wide end compared to a typical 24-70mm, and whether that tradeoff works for you depends entirely on how you shoot.
The Nikkor Z 50mm f/1.8 S vs. Viltrox 55mm f/1.8: A Dead-Even Fight With a Clear Winner for Most Buyers
Picking a 50mm lens for your Nikon Z system just got more complicated. The Viltrox 55mm f/1.8 from the Evo series is an apochromatic lens priced at $370, and it's gunning directly for the Nikkor Z 50mm f/1.8 S.
Fujifilm XF 16-55mm f/2.8 II vs. 16-50mm: Is the Price Difference Worth It?
The Fujifilm XF 16-55mm f/2.8 R LM WR II is a significant lens for anyone shooting in the X system. It's a red badge lens, which means Fujifilm's highest standard, and the original version set a high bar that this new iteration has to clear.
Flash Photography Mistakes Most Beginners Don't Know They're Making
Flash photography has a surprisingly short list of things that will quietly ruin your shots, and most beginners hit several of them before they even realize there's a problem. Knowing what those mistakes are before they cost you time, money, or a shoot you can't redo is worth more than most gear upgrades.
AI Photo Editing Credits: The Industry's Dirtiest Money Grab
I hate the idea of credits. It's like feeding quarters into an arcade game (yeah, I'm old), never sure how many it'll take before you get a decent run. After years of working with generative AI, the credit system feels like an ongoing beta trial designed to monetize trial and error.
The Real Reason Photographers Are Quitting Instagram
It is happening quietly. Working photographers, the kind who built audiences in the 30,000 to 200,000 follower range over five or ten years, are deleting their accounts, archiving their grids, or simply going silent. There are no farewell posts. No dramatic announcements. The accounts just stop updating, and a few months later they are gone.
If you have noticed it in your own feed, you are not imagining it. The exodus is real, it is accelerating, and the reasons are not the ones the platform's defenders want to talk about.
You Don't Need a Dramatic Location to Shoot Compelling Landscape Photos
Shooting intimate water scenes in landscape photography is one of the most overlooked ways to build a compelling portfolio. You don't need dramatic mountain vistas or sweeping coastlines to create striking images.
Why Planning the Perfect Shot Produces Worse Photos
The pressure to nail every frame is one of the most common things that stalls creative growth. A decades-old classroom experiment reveals exactly why that pressure works against you, and what actually produces better images over time.
How Far Can You Push a 5 MP Raw File With Modern Upscaling Software?
Megapixel count is one of the most debated specs in photography, and the question of how few you can get away with for large prints is one that rarely gets a straight answer. Keith Cooper put that question to a real test using a camera from 2002 and actual prints made today, and the results are worth seeing.
The Honest Results of Shooting JPEG-Only for an Entire Month
Shooting in raw is so ingrained in modern photography that giving it up for a month sounds almost reckless. This photographer does exactly that, and what he finds out about his own habits is more revealing than any gear review.
From Gear Prep to Gimbal Work: How to Cover a Conference Like a Pro
Conferences are a common subject matter for many professional photographers and videographers, and I recently worked on one for a client and wanted to share how I prepared to cover it. Whether you're planning to cover a conference professionally or for fun, I hope my experience helps you prepare and execute coverage of one.
The Problem With How Photographers Talk About Money (and What Needs to Change)
Photography has a money problem. Not a "there is not enough of it" problem, although that is also true for many photographers. A deeper problem: the photography community has developed a set of cultural patterns around money that no other professional industry tolerates, and those patterns are actively suppressing income for everyone in the field.
