A 2010 Camera, a 2012 Lens, and a Trip to Italy
A 15-year-old camera with no USB-C charging, no eye sensor, and dated video specs still earns a spot in a working photographer's bag for a trip to the Italian coast. That says something about what actually keeps a camera in rotation years after its spec sheet stops mattering.
Tamron 12-20mm f/2.8: A New Fast Ultra Wide Angle Zoom for Sony E and Nikon Z Full Frame
Tamron has announced the 12-20mm f/2.8, a fast-aperture ultra-wide angle zoom for Sony E-mount and Nikon Z mount full frame mirrorless cameras. The Sony E-mount version goes on sale July 30 at $1,699, and the Nikon Z mount version follows on August 27 at $1,799.
The lens covers a 12mm to 20mm focal range and holds a constant f/2.8 maximum aperture across the entire zoom. Tamron is positioning the wide 12mm end and the bright aperture toward astrophotography and interior work, where both the extra field of view and light-gathering matter.
'We Own More Cameras Than We Have Employees': Inside Capture One's Hasselblad Deal
The announcement itself was straightforward enough. On July 2, Hasselblad and Capture One confirmed that Hasselblad's .3FR raw files now open natively in Capture One, with dedicated color profiles for the X2D II 100C, the X2D 100C, and the CFV 100C digital back, and lens profiles covering 19 XCD lenses. Tethered capture is planned for later in 2026. After years of forum threads and feature requests, the wait ended with a software update.
They Didn't Show, So I Went Into the Bisti Badlands Alone at Night Anyway
Speeding down Highway 371, I received a call. The two photographers who knew the way around Bisti Badlands weren't going to show tonight. This was a problem. I had never been there, and it was basically Mother Nature's escape room.
Bisti has no trails, no signs, no landmarks, and no cell signal. Just thousands of hoodoos and winding canyons. I'd have to find my way to some of the features, then find my way back to my car in the dark in a place I'd never been before. It would just be me and my navigation app. Here's how it went.
The Photograph Changes the Moment You Change the Moment
One of the arguments I hear most often against street photography has very little to do with photography itself.
"If you're going to photograph someone, why not just talk to them?"
Sometimes it comes from photographers who have never been interested in candid work. Sometimes it comes from people who are uncomfortable with the idea of photographing strangers in public at all. Sometimes the conversation drifts toward privacy, ethics, or consent, as if every photograph made in a public space begins with the assumption that someone has been wronged.
Three Full Frame Cameras: One Trip, One Clear Winner
Picking one full frame camera for travel means weighing color, size, stabilization, and price against each other, and the differences rarely show up on a spec sheet. Three cameras in the same price range can feel like completely different tools once you actually carry them through a city all day.
Is the Huawei Pura 90s Pro Max the Ultimate Telephoto Flagship? Here is What We Know
For years, telephoto performance on smartphones has felt like a compromise, often forcing photographers to choose between reach and image quality. With the global launch of the Huawei Pura 90s Pro Max, Huawei is looking to shift that narrative and establish a new standard for mobile photography by bringing some of the latest imaging tech to the smartphone.
The Proof Even Legendary Photographers Miss Most of Their Shots
Impostor syndrome hits almost every creative person at some point, and if you shoot photos, you know the feeling: you look at work you admire and wonder why you even bother picking up a camera. Jesse Senko has a surprisingly practical answer to that spiral, and it comes from an unlikely source.
A $395 Lens Just Beat a $900 Nikon at Its Own Game
For years, Nikon's f/1.8 S-line lenses stood almost alone: premium optics at a maximum aperture where you rarely find premium anything. That comfortable spot is now under real pressure, and a head-to-head test shows exactly how much.
Meta's New AI Detector Can't Even Catch Its Own Images After a Simple Crop
Meta built an AI detection tool to catch images made by its new Muse Image generator, then failed a basic test with its own pictures. When those AI images were cropped, the tool missed more than half of them.
11 Mistakes That Make a Portfolio Look Unprofessional
A portfolio is not a gallery of your favorite photos. It is a sales tool, and its only job is to answer one question in a potential client's mind: can this person deliver the specific thing I need, done well? Most portfolios fail at that job not because the photography is bad, but because of a handful of avoidable mistakes in how the work is chosen, ordered, and presented. A viewer forms an impression in well under a second and decides whether to keep looking or move on within a few images. Here are eleven mistakes that quietly cost you that decision, each with a fix.
Covering the ICE Protests at Delaney Hall
People keep asking me what it's like photographing the anti-ICE protests outside Delaney Hall in Newark.
The general perception is of a nonstop war zone. That's probably the biggest misconception people have after scrolling through photographs online. They see the pepper spray, the flashbangs, the clouds of CS gas drifting through the street, officers in riot gear, protesters in zip ties, and they imagine the whole day unfolds like an action movie stuck on repeat.
It doesn't.
Most of the day is waiting.
Overcoming the Greatest Fear in Street Photography
Every photographer who has thought about photographing a public space knows the low-humming anxiety of the "worst-case scenario." The fear of someone seeing and confronting us remains one of the steepest mental hurdles to actually getting started in street photography. For years, it was mine. We convince ourselves that the moment we are noticed, the world will grind to a halt and anger will follow. But what actually happens when the nightmare comes true?
On a summer Saturday morning, I had the dubious pleasure of finding out.
The FIFA 2026 World Cup Is Somewhere Else
There is a particular kind of expectation that follows you when you say you are in a country hosting a World Cup. It is not always spoken out loud, but it sits there in the background of conversations, in messages, in assumptions that come almost automatically, as if geography alone were enough to place you inside the flow of the event.
You are here, therefore you are inside it.
It sounds logical until you actually walk through the city.
How to Photograph People Who Hate Being Photographed
Your best portrait gear does nothing if the person sitting in front of the lens looks stiff and posed. That truth reshapes how you approach every shoot, and it costs nothing to apply.
Seven Steps to a Backpack That Packs Itself
If you open the main compartment of your backpack during the day, your packing system is working against you. Every zipper you fumble with, every sack you dig through, and every rain cover you peel off burns energy you could spend covering ground.
Why Getty Just Abandoned Its $3.7 Billion Merger With Shutterstock
Getty Images has killed its $3.7 billion merger with Shutterstock, refusing a condition set by UK regulators that would have forced Shutterstock to sell off its entire editorial photography business. The deal had already cleared US antitrust review with no strings attached, which makes the UK objection the single reason two of the biggest names in stock photography will stay separate.
Why Your Photos Look Worse Than the Scene You Saw
You stand in front of something stunning, a valley flooded with evening light, a city skyline at dusk, and you press the shutter sure you have captured it. Then you look at the file and the magic is gone. The colors are flatter, the sky is blown out or the ground is a muddy mess, the mountain that loomed over you looks like a small bump, and the whole thing feels ordinary. The instinct is to blame the camera, or your skill, or to start shopping for a better lens. Usually none of those is the real culprit.
Yellowstone Bison Flips Tourist 8 Feet as Photographer Captures the Whole Thing
A bull bison charged an older man walking with his grandson at a Yellowstone campground on Friday evening and threw him roughly eight feet into the air. The man landed on his side with serious injuries, and the animal stood over him afterward instead of running off.
A Portable Projector for Portraits, Outdoor Exhibitions and More
I've been looking for new ways to exhibit my photo and video work, ways that aren't tied to white walls or interior spaces. That search led me toward projectors, and I found one that fits. The appeal of something untethered is obvious in the fact that you can take your work almost anywhere. I initially expected I'd need a separate power station, but instead I found a quality projector with a built-in battery, making the whole setup far simpler than I'd imagined.
