10 Lightroom Mistakes That Are Ruining Your Photos
Lightroom is the most widely used photo editing application in the world, and for good reason. It is powerful, nondestructive, and flexible enough to handle everything from a casual vacation gallery to a professional wedding shoot. But that flexibility comes with a cost: there are dozens of ways to make your images look worse instead of better, and most of them feel like improvements while you are doing them.
Nikon Z5 II Real-World Review: Is This the Best Value Full Frame Camera Right Now?
The Best Beginner Film Stocks for Color and Black and White
Saramonic Air SE Review. The Best Cheap Wireless Microphone For iPhones
Getting Started With Portrait Lighting: 4 Classic Patterns Explained
The Raw Editing Workflow That Actually Looks Like Film
The Peak Design Travel Collection: Do They Fit in a Photographer's Rotation?
13 Signs Your Photography Website Is Costing You Clients
Slow load times. No clear pricing page. A portfolio organized by date instead of genre. These are the silent killers that drive potential bookings away before a visitor ever reaches your contact form. Your website might be gorgeous to you, but if it's not converting visitors into inquiries, something is broken, and it's probably one of these things.
Viltrox 50mm f/1.4 Pro: Character, Weight, and a Lot of Value
I am essentially a one-man photo department for a 135-year-old newspaper. On top of that, I shoot portraits and events professionally, and have for over a decade.
Gear doesn't sit on a shelf for very long. It has to put in work and earn its keep.
I used the Viltrox 50mm f/1.4 Pro on actual client shoots and photojournalism work over several months. Here's what stood out.
The $1,500 Camera Nobody Knew Existed
How Long It Actually Takes to Make One Perfect Darkroom Print
Shooting Beautiful Photos a Few Hundred Yards From Your Front Door
How to Thrive by Diversifying Your Photography Income
In 2025, going into 2026, it seems that photography isn't always just enough. You usually need something else on the go or another way to earn income to survive the slow periods between jobs. As a professional photographer for quite some time now, I've developed a handful of income streams built in and around photography that allow me to take a little pressure off when I may not be as booked and busy as I otherwise am.
10 Camera Settings You Should Change Right Now (and Never Touch Again)
Every camera ships with default settings designed for the broadest possible audience. Those defaults are tuned for safety, not precision. They prioritize avoiding catastrophic failure over delivering optimal results, which is fine if you're handing the camera to a tourist but actively counterproductive if you're trying to produce professional work.
The Sharpest 35mm Lens You Can Buy Right Now Might Surprise You
Picking the sharpest 35mm lens for a full frame camera is harder than it sounds, especially now that the market has more serious contenders than ever. Frost has tested over 50 of them across the past four years, and the field has changed enough that his original rankings no longer tell the whole story.
This Is Why Your Photography Stopped Improving and How to Fix It
Most people who pick up a camera hit a wall. The early momentum fades, improvement slows, and you find yourself stuck somewhere between beginner and advanced, good enough to know what a great shot looks like but not consistent enough to make them reliably. That gap has a name, and knowing how to navigate it makes the difference between photographers who grow and ones who quit.
Why Hyperspectral Satellites Can See Things RGB Cameras Physically Cannot
Shooting Red Rock Canyon with a Sony a7 IV, a Pug, and Three Lenses
10 Things Every Photographer Googles but Would Never Admit
There are two kinds of photographer search histories: the one they'd show you and the one that actually exists. The public version is full of noble queries like "Rembrandt lighting setup" and "Ansel Adams zone system." The private version, the real one, is a graveyard of 2 AM panic searches, basic questions asked for the fifth time, and full-sentence pleas typed into Google with the desperation of someone defusing a bomb.
Every photographer has these searches. Nobody talks about them. Consider this article a safe space.
Boudoir Photography Has a Branding Problem (And Most of Us Caused It)
Go look at ten boudoir photographers' websites right now. Read their About pages. Read their taglines. Read the part where they describe the experience. Now try to remember which one was which. You can't. That's the problem.
Somewhere along the way, the boudoir industry settled on about ten acceptable words: empowering, confident, beautiful, goddess, queen, fierce, sensual, timeless, stunning, luxurious. Then every photographer on the planet grabbed the same handful and arranged them in slightly different orders. Like a game of empowerment mad libs.
The Right Focal Length for Portraits Isn't What Most People Think
The lens you choose doesn't just affect background blur or how much of a scene fits in the frame. It physically changes how your subject's face looks, and if you're picking focal lengths based on habit rather than intention, you may be getting results that don't match what you're seeing in real life.
The Right Way to Isolate and Recolor Clothing in Photoshop
What Professional Photographers Are Actually Worth in the Age of AI
The question of what a professional photographer is actually worth in 2026, when anyone with a phone or an AI prompt can produce a compelling image, is one that cuts to the core of building a sustainable career behind the camera. If you can't answer it clearly, charging real money for your work becomes almost impossible to justify.









