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Abstract, Experimental, or Conceptual? What Photographers Actually Mean

Photographers constantly describe their work as abstract, experimental, or conceptual. The problem is not the words themselves, but that they often refer to different levels of the work. When visual style, process, and project structure are mixed under one label, clarity disappears. This article separates those levels and shows how to use the terms precisely. 

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Hard Light, Soft Light, and Silhouettes: One Strobe, Three Results

Choosing a strobe often comes down to one question: how versatile is it? Eli Infante put the Westcott FJ250 through three distinct setups in a single session to show exactly what it's capable of, from soft beauty light to hard dramatic slices of light to a high-key silhouette build. 

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Why the Most Technically Perfect Lens Available Could Be Holding You Back

Does a technically flawless lens actually make you a better photographer, or does it quietly remove the part of the process where the learning happens? 

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The Real Cost of Photographing Friends and Family

Mixing money and personal relationships is one of the fastest ways to damage both. Nearly half of all photographers say finding new clients is their single biggest challenge, which makes the "start with friends and family" advice feel reasonable on the surface. 

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The Inner Voice Killing Your Creative Momentum

The gap between knowing what you want to make and actually making it is one of the most common struggles in creative work. It's not laziness, and it's not a lack of discipline, even though that's the story most people tell themselves. 

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Critique the Community: Emotion

Welcome to the April Critique the Community!  This month's theme is "Emotion" and can be interpreted however you see fit. 

 

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A Beginner's Guide to What Every Camera Mode Actually Does (and When to Use Each One)

Look at the top of your camera. Somewhere on the body, probably on a physical dial, you will find a cluster of letters that might as well be hieroglyphics if nobody has ever explained them: P, A (or Av on Canon), S (or Tv on Canon), and M. Nikon, Sony, and OM System use P/A/S/M. Pentax mirrors Canon's labeling with Av and Tv. Some cameras throw in a green rectangle, a handful of icons depicting tiny people or mountains. Here's what they all mean. 

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Aspect Ratio Is a Creative Choice: Here’s What 1:1 Taught Me

Most of us never question the shape of the frame—we just shoot what the camera gives us. We consider a 3:2 ratio normal, and we rarely stray from it. What happens when you stop treating aspect ratio like a default and start using it like a creative choice? 

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The Sigma 15mm f/1.4 vs. Sony 15mm f/1.4 G vs. Viltrox 15mm f/1.7: Which APS-C Lens Wins?

The Sigma 16mm f/1.4 has been the bestselling APS-C mirrorless lens of all time, and Sigma just replaced it with something smaller, sharper, and better built. Whether the new Sigma 15mm f/1.4 is actually worth picking over the Sony or the budget Viltrox is a more complicated question than it might look. 

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Photoshop for Absolute Beginners: Everything You Need to Know to Get Started

If you've never opened Photoshop before, the interface can feel like a wall of buttons with no clear entry point. Knowing where to start, what to ignore, and how the core pieces fit together makes the difference between actually learning the software and giving up in the first ten minutes. 

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The Real Reason Going Pro Might Ruin Your Love of Photography

Most people assume that turning a passion into a career is the ultimate goal. For photography specifically, that assumption can cost you more than you realize, and not just financially. 

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The Leica M6 and Cinestill 800T Night Walk Nobody Asked For But Everyone Needs

Shooting through a creative slump is one of the harder parts of photography that nobody talks about honestly. Kodak Vision3 500T's tungsten-balanced sibling, Cinestill 800T, is one of the few film stocks that can pull you back in almost by itself. 

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Is This $30 Camera Sling From Amazon Actually Worth It?

Does the biggest brand name always make the best camera bag? Not necessarily. I was recently gifted the BAGSMART Canvas Crossbody Camera Bag — a vintage-style canvas sling bag that isn't a household name but has racked up a significant following on Amazon. At $29.99, if it holds up, it could be a genuinely worthwhile option for photographers who want something functional, compact, and stylish without breaking the bank. 

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Behind the Scenes: How I Photographed Panoramas in Joshua Tree

Take a peek behind the scenes at how I created several enormous, detailed night panoramas in Joshua Tree National Park. The surreal landscapes are perfect for this sort of work. Below, I'll walk through the process, gear, and a few discoveries that make panoramas better. 

First, I'll briefly cover the gear. Then I'll explain the process of capturing the panoramas, including how to do this with a "normal" ball head. Finally, I'll share two simple tips that improved consistency.

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The Exposure Triangle Explained: ISO, Aperture, and Shutter Speed for Complete Beginners

Every camera you have ever used, from a disposable Kodak to a $6,000 mirrorless body, does exactly one thing: it controls how much light hits a sensor. That is it. Everything else, the tracking autofocus, the computational wizardry, the menus nested seven layers deep, is in service of that one job. The three tools your camera uses to manage light are ISO, aperture, and shutter speed, and the relationship between them is called the exposure triangle. 

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The Background Trick That Makes Skin Tones Pop in Any Portrait

Getting skin tones right in post-processing is one of those things that separates a good portrait from a great one. The difference usually comes down to a handful of specific adjustments most people skip. 

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Sony a7 V Real-World Review: Better Than the a1 for Under $3,000?

Picking the right Sony body right now is genuinely complicated. The Sony a7 V sits under $3,000, yet this video argues it beats the Sony a1. 

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Did Shooting Digital Make This Film Photographer's Photos Worse?

Shooting with a digital camera after years of film can be a humbling experience. The gap between snapping shots and actually making photographs is wider than most people realize, and Steve O'Nions found that out the hard way on a street photography day in Liverpool. 

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Why Your Outdoor Portraits Look Flat and How Flash Fixes It

Outdoor portraits in flat, lifeless light are one of the most common problems to solve, and a speedlight is often all it takes to fix them. 

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Which Carbon Fiber Monopod Suits You Better? We Review the YC Onion PINETA Pro and SmallRig 5565

Monopods used to be just assistive tools for heavy camera setups. Now they can stand on their own. These two monopods take it further by being extra efficient, but which one is better for you? 

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Why I Stopped Fearing AI and Started Using It

Photographers are worried about AI coming to take their jobs. Fair enough, with all the new tools out there you might very well think that. Yet, it is simply impossible, and Aftershoot has finally proven that. Aftershoot AI works for you, not against you.  

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=s0SGhSOOF74

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The 14-Year-Old Camera That Keeps Clicking

This is an appreciation for the camera equivalent of when you drive a car for a long, long time and it holds up. This is for none other than what was my original photographic workhorse, the Canon EOS 6D Mark I.  

This camera has received both praise and backlash over the years — from its autofocus system to its slower frame rate to a range of other strengths and weaknesses. When I was just getting into photography, it was slightly after the 6D was announced back in 2012.

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10 Photographer Arguments That Will Never Be Resolved

Every profession has its unresolvable debates. Chefs argue about whether a hot dog is a sandwich. Musicians argue about whether music theory stifles creativity. Photographers have their own collection of eternal conflicts, and what makes them special is that nobody has ever won any of them. Not once. Not in forums, not in comment sections, not at workshops, and not at the bar after a shoot. Here are the ten battles that will outlive us all. 

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The Lightroom Settings Behind That Hazy, Ethereal Photography Style

Getting that soft, misty look in your landscape and travel photos isn't about one secret trick. It's a combination of shooting conditions, light direction, and a handful of specific editing moves that most people either skip or don't know to try. 

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Why the Best Travel Portraits Don't Look Like Portraits at All

Getting a genuine portrait of a stranger is one of the hardest things to pull off in travel photography. The second someone knows a camera is pointed at them, they stop being themselves, and whatever drew you to them in the first place vanishes. 

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Why Mini Sessions Might Be Quietly Killing Your Photography Business

Mini sessions are one of the most common strategies portrait photographers use to fill their calendars, but the math behind them rarely adds up. When you account for travel, setup, shooting, editing, delivery, and client communication, you're often looking at a pittance even before taxes, equipment costs, or software subscriptions. 

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The Studio Lighting Tools Most Shooters Overlook

Shooting with a snoot or projector attachment unlocks a level of light control most setups simply can't match. Mark Wallace puts that to the test in a recent studio session, building off a lighting guide created by his colleague and then pushing into entirely original territory. 

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The Biggest Photography Stories of March 2026

March 2026 was one of those months where every corner of the photography world seemed to shift at once. From semiconductor crises driven by AI infrastructure to the Supreme Court declining to touch a pivotal AI copyright case, from the biggest camera trade show on the planet delivering almost no new cameras to Kodak rewriting the names of its most beloved film stocks, this was a month that will be remembered as a turning point. These ten stories captured the month. 

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Fstoppers Photographer of the Month (March 2026): Igor Butskhrikidze

The Fstoppers community is brimming with creative vision and talent. Every day, we comb through your work, looking for images to feature as the Photo of the Day or simply to admire your creativity and technical prowess. In 2026, we're featuring a new photographer every month, whose portfolio represents both stellar photographic achievement and a high level of involvement within the Fstoppers community.

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A Guide to 50mm vs. 85mm Lenses: Choosing Your Focal Length

If you were stranded on an island, or perhaps more realistically, dropped into the bustling streets of Jakarta or a temple in Bali, and could only choose one prime lens, which would it be? The 50mm or the 85mm? Let's find out. 

It is one of the most debated questions in photography. Both lenses are legendary in their own right. The 50mm is the storyteller, the lens that sees the world roughly as you do. The 85mm is the isolator, the lens that flatters subjects and melts away distractions.

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Info Fstoppers2019-09-30T13:49:00+02:002019-09-30T13:49:00+02:00 Fstoppers

Photography News and Community for Creative Professionals

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