Every Camera System's Best-Kept-Secret Lens
Every lens catalog has a flagship tier. These are the lenses that dominate reviews, anchor marketing campaigns, and justify the system's reputation: the Canon RF 24-70mm f/2.8 L, the Sony FE 70-200mm f/2.8 GM II, the Nikon Z 50mm f/1.2 S. They deserve the attention. They are genuinely excellent. And they are not the lenses that most photographers would benefit from buying next.
No Ego in Photography: Why Shooting for Yourself Changed Everything for Me
The longer I spend around photography, the more I realize how easy it is to quietly lose sight of why we started taking photographs in the first place.
It rarely happens all at once. Usually it happens gradually.
At the beginning, photography often feels simple. You take photographs because you enjoy the process. You are curious about light, composition, weather, locations, or simply the experience of being outside with a camera. There is very little pressure attached to it because there are no expectations yet.
Small APS-C Cameras, Big Results: Travel Photography Kits That Don’t Weigh You Down
I was in Bilbao earlier this year, and a photographer appeared from around a narrow backstreet with a massive backpack and a huge full frame camera and zoom lens hanging from his neck. He carefully took the obviously heavy pack off and placed it on a chair outside a cafe. The relief on his face, to take a break from lugging all that weight around, was telling.
We Review the Lexar Silver Plus MicroSD Memory Card
Let's be honest, buying a memory card is probably the most boring part of picking up new gear. It's not a shiny new lens or a camera with a red badge. But if we're being real, it is arguably the most critical piece of the puzzle. Without a memory card, cameras without built-in memory will not be able to save any data, essentially becoming an overpriced paperweight.
The Biggest Debates in Landscape Photography, Settled (Sort Of)
Landscape photography is full of confident, contradictory advice. Two people can disagree completely on the same topic and both sound completely sure of themselves, which makes it hard to know what to actually believe, especially early on.
16 Years of Shooting Film: What Actually Changed and What Got Worse
Film photography cost less, took longer, and had far fewer options in 2010 than it does today. Els Vanopstal has been shooting film since that year, and the contrast between then and now covers everything from what you pay per roll to how you get your negatives back.
Canon RF 24-105mm f/4L Review: 2,000 Photos Later, Was It Enough?
The Canon RF 24-105mm f/4L IS USM is one of those lenses that tends to get overlooked once you've moved on to faster glass. If you've been shooting with f/2.8 zooms and primes, it's easy to assume the f/4 version isn't worth reaching for anymore.
A Towed Car, a Rooftop, and One Shot at a Spiral Driveway
Shooting cars at night in a city like Hong Kong is a different challenge than a controlled studio setup or a daytime location shoot. You're working with mixed artificial light, heavy traffic, unpredictable locations, and gear decisions that have real consequences when you only get one chance at a shot.
Why Your Next Upgrade Should Be a Lens, Not a Camera
The most common question beginners ask after buying their first camera is some version of "what should I upgrade to next?" The answer they expect is a better camera body. The answer that will actually improve their photographs is almost always a better lens.
Are You Stuck in a Photography Rut?
There have been plenty of times over the years when I have had to say the same thing to myself.
Wake up. Get out of your funk. Go do something different.
Sometimes I say it after weeks of shooting the same type of image. Other times it comes after feeling strangely disconnected from photography altogether. The camera still comes with me, the locations are still good, and technically the photographs are perfectly fine, but something feels missing.
I think most photographers experience this at some stage, whether they admit it or not.
Overestimating the Scene: The Mistake Experienced Photographers Keep Making
Experienced photographers rarely miss the scene. They know what to look for. They arrive with a clear idea, and that is exactly where the error begins. Instead of reading what is in front of them, they start looking for confirmation of what they came for.
Photoshop 2026's New Reflection Removal Tool: What It Does and Where It Fails
Photoshop 2026 just added automatic reflection removal, and it's the first time the tool has been available in the application. If you shoot through glass, windows, or any reflective surface, this is worth your attention.
What Happens When You Shoot Landscapes at f/1.2
The Viltrox 35mm f/1.2 is built for portraits and low light, but Mads Peter Iversen took it into the forest for landscape work to see how far it can stretch. That tension between a wide-open prime and a genre that typically demands stopped-down sharpness makes for a genuinely interesting test.
One Speedlight, One Umbrella, and a Lighting Trick That Actually Works
Shooting portraits in bright outdoor light is one of the harder problems to solve with a single speedlight. The sun is usually too strong, your flash can't keep up, and the results look forced. Here's a specific technique that sidesteps all of that, and it's simpler than most people expect.
Ilford HP5, a 4x5 Camera, and a Ruined Victorian Quarry in North Wales
Shooting large format film in an abandoned Welsh slate quarry sounds like a niche pursuit, but the images that come out of locations like this are unlike anything a modern digital workflow produces. The combination of 4x5 film, dramatic ruins, and unpredictable natural light creates a specific kind of pressure that forces deliberate, considered photography.
Photographers Will Be Impressed With the New Photo Features in iOS 27
After some false starts, Apple has gone all out for the upcoming iOS 27, due this fall. There's a greatly improved Siri, based on Google's Gemini, and a host of AI features. Our readers will be most interested in the new photo-taking and editing features in iOS 27, and I was able to download the developer beta for a quick look around.
Will This Be the New King of Content Creation Cameras?
The whole vlogging camera market looks like it could be about to shift again, and the company that really set the standard for this category seems ready to make its mark once more.
There has been a wave of new camera releases recently, but this one stands out. Unveiled at the Cannes Film Festival, it's a big stage for a camera of this size, and it suggests that DJI may be positioning it as more than just a vlogging camera. It looks like they have their sights set on filmmakers too.
I Bought The Best 35mm Camera in The World — And Made It Better
I know I've talked about my renewed interest in old film cameras before. Therefore I won't go over old ground in detail. I'll just say the main reason was the desire for a pure photography experience once again, without technology getting in my way. The only new digital camera that has given me that so far is a Leica Q2 Monochrome I purchased three years ago. I've enjoyed the experience so much, in fact, I craved more. Well, really I should say, I craved less!
Understanding ISO in Photography: What Finally Made It Click for Me in the Field
When I first started learning photography, ISO was probably the setting I understood the least.
Shutter speed made sense because I could see movement blur or freeze. Aperture made sense because I could see depth of field changing in the image. ISO, however, felt far more abstract. I knew it made the image brighter or darker, but beyond that I mostly treated it as a setting to avoid touching unless absolutely necessary.
The Camera Industry Ignores Its Youngest and Oldest Customers
The camera industry designs products for a narrow band of humanity. Browse the marketing material from Canon, Nikon, Sony, Fujifilm, or any other manufacturer and the target buyer is consistent: a 25-to-45-year-old enthusiast or professional, fit enough to carry a kilogram of gear on a mountain, dexterous enough to operate tiny buttons in the dark, and technically literate enough to navigate a 400-item menu system. The cameras are excellent for this person.
