AI Photo Editing Credits: The Industry's Dirtiest Money Grab
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.
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.
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.
40 Megapixels in an APS-C Body: The Fujifilm X-T5 Four Years Later
The Same Photo, Five Different Editors: Which One Actually Wins?
8 Unpopular Photography Opinions That Are Actually True
Every Sony Camera Ranked: Which Ones Are Worth It and Which Ones Aren't
What It's Like to Operate a Camera on an Actual Feature Film
Getting invited onto a feature film set as a guest camera operator is not something that happens every day, and when it does, the gap between that world and smaller productions becomes impossible to ignore. The crew size, the budget pressure, the overtime math: it all adds up to something that operates on a completely different level than commercial shoots or YouTube content.
Is the Sigma 35mm f/1.4 Art the Best 35mm Lens for Sony Shooters Right Now?
Choosing a 35mm lens for a Sony camera used to mean paying a premium for the Sony FE 35mm f/1.4 GM or settling for something that fell short in one area or another. The Sigma 35mm f/1.4 DG DN Art changes that math in a meaningful way, and the second version of this lens is smaller, lighter, and improved across nearly every metric compared to its predecessor.
The Hidden Problem Ruining Your Natural Light Portraits
Natural light sounds foolproof until you realize the walls, grass, and brick around your subject are quietly wrecking your skin tones. Omar Gonzalez shot four portraits in four different locations, same camera, same white balance, and the color differences are visible enough to make you rethink where you've been setting up.
Can AI Make Useable E-Commerce Fashion Photography?
As artificial intelligence continues to advance, everyone seems to be saying AI is coming for the fashion industry, especially for photographers and models. I recently put Nano Banana Pro through a real e-commerce test to see whether it could actually do the job of a professional photographer with a full team.
Your First 30 Days With a New Camera: A Day-by-Day Learning Plan
You just bought a camera. Maybe it is a Canon EOS R50, maybe a Nikon Z50 II, maybe a Sony a6400 you found on sale, maybe a Fujifilm X-T50 that took three months on a waitlist. Whatever it is, you unboxed it, charged the battery, took a couple of test shots of your cat, and now it is sitting on the counter while you wonder what to do next.
Street Photography Is Dead. Smartphones Killed It and That’s a Good Thing
There's a sentence that keeps coming back in photography circles: street photography is dead.
Most people say it with nostalgia. Some say it with frustration. A few say it like a provocation.
They're all wrong. And right.
Street photography isn't dead because people stopped doing it. It's "dead" because everyone started.
The Real Problem Isn’t Death. It’s Saturation.We are producing more images today than at any other point in history. Every street corner, every passing gesture, every accidental juxtaposition: it's all being photographed, constantly.
You Can Shoot Professional Model Portraits With a Phone. Here's How.
Shooting model portraits well has less to do with gear than most people assume, and everything to do with understanding light and how to pose a subject. Whether you're working with a phone by a window or a pair of strobes in a studio, the gap between a flat, forgettable shot and one that actually stops someone mid-scroll comes down to a handful of decisions you make before you ever press the shutter.
How Sharp Is the Viltrox 35mm f/1.2 STF N on Sony's Most Demanding Sensor?
The Viltrox 35mm f/1.2 is already a well-regarded fast prime, but Viltrox has now released a revised version called the AF 35mm f/1.2 STF N, dropping the LED display and swapping the old control ring for a proper aperture ring. If you shoot Sony E-mount and have been watching this lens, the changes are worth understanding before you spend $999.
Why Gerald Undone Is Walking Away From a Decade of Camera Reviews
7Artisans Announces 35mm f/2.8 LTM Lens
There’s something surprisingly novel about making a new lens for a system that predates the governments of many modern countries. The Leica Thread Mount (LTM, also known as the M39 mount), born in the early 20th century wasn’t designed for firmware updates, autofocus motors, or clinical perfection. It was designed for walking. For looking. For getting close enough to feel like you were part of the scene rather than observing it from a safe distance.
14 Hidden Costs of Being a Professional Photographer Nobody Talks About
When you calculate whether photography can support you financially, you start with the obvious math: how many sessions per month, times your session rate, equals annual income. That number looks promising. It is also wrong, because it does not account for the dozens of expenses that sit between your gross revenue and the money you actually take home.
Come With Me to The Photography Show in New York City
The Photography Show returns to New York City this week, presenting thousands of photographs available for purchase or viewing. The show is the oldest running event of its kind and presents a remarkable variety of photographic styles. It is worth a visit if you're in the New York City area this week.





