When People Become Props in Street Photography
Focus and Sharpness in Landscape Photography: What Actually Works in the Field
Sharpness is one of the first things many photographers judge in a landscape image, but it is also one of the areas that caused me the most frustration when I was starting out. I used to come home convinced that I had captured strong images, only to load them onto a larger screen and realize the foreground was soft or the distant detail was not as sharp as I thought it would be. At the time, I blamed gear more than technique. I assumed my camera or lens was holding me back, when in reality the biggest issue was my process in the field.
PMI's New 'Vanishing Fog' Makes Adding Smoke Easier Than Ever
I used to think all fog machine liquid was the same. Never once had I considered that a new fog formula could be far better than what I've been using for decades. PMI's Vanishing Formula Kit has changed my opinion, and today I test it against three of the most popular portable fog systems on the market.
Portable fog machines have become one of my favorite tools for photography and filmmaking. Whether I'm shooting portraits, product photography, miniatures, or cinematic video, adding a little smoke, mist, or haze can instantly elevate a scene.
Which Is Right for You? Canon's R6 Lineup Compared: Mark II vs. Mark III vs. R6 V
The Canon EOS R6 used to be a simple recommendation. You wanted a full frame hybrid that did a little of everything well without costing as much as the R5, so you bought the R6, and that was the end of the conversation. That clarity is gone. The line has split into three very different cameras that happen to share a name, and choosing between them now means knowing what kind of shooter you actually are. The good news is that once you sort that out, the right answer becomes obvious, because Canon has aimed each of these bodies at a genuinely different person.
Fujifilm X100VI vs. Panasonic Lumix LX10: Which Compact Is Actually Better for Travel?
Choosing a compact travel camera is harder than it looks, especially when two solid options sit at very different price points with very different sensor sizes, lenses, and feature sets. The Fujifilm X100VI and the Panasonic Lumix LX10 both pitch themselves as small, capable everyday cameras, but they take genuinely different approaches to getting there.
The Portrait Photography Trick That Makes Landscape Shots Stand Out
Landscape photography is one of the most crowded genres in the medium, and standing out gets harder as cameras make technically competent images easier to produce. Ben Harvey argues the answer isn't more gear or better locations; it's rethinking how you use depth of field in a genre that almost never does.
Fujifilm's X-Trans Sensors Compared: Has the Newest Always Been the Best?
Hit Rate in Landscape Photography: Why Most Shoots Don’t Work, and Why That’s Normal
There is a moment I've become very familiar with over the years. It usually happens on the drive home, just after I've packed the camera away and the light has long since faded.
It's that quiet realization that nothing from the day will make it into a final image.
No keeper. No portfolio shot. Nothing to process.
For a long time, I treated those days as failures. I would mentally replay decisions I made in the field, question timing, and sometimes even question whether I had missed something obvious. It felt like the effort should have guaranteed a result.
Why You Should Embrace the Natural Rhythm of Your Photography
When we think about seasons in photography, our minds usually jump to the literal shifts throughout the year. We imagine the specific light of a spring morning or the way autumn color transforms a familiar trail. But we spend so much time obsessing over the conditions outside that we often overlook the shifting climate within our own creative process.
Hidden Keyboard Shortcuts in Premiere Pro That Will Cut Your Edit Time
The Case for Micro Four Thirds Sensors in 2026
My Amazon Prime Day Pick: The OBSBOT Tail 2
Prime Day is an excellent opportunity to pick up top tech at lower prices, but it can be a little overwhelming when browsing through all the products on offer. The OBSBOT Tail 2 is one such product, which we previously reviewed and recommended, and now has a great Prime Day deal. From vloggers, creators, and YouTubers to live-streaming conferences and gatherings of all kinds, this little PTZR camera is the camera crew that fits in your pocket.
The Decisive Moment Is 74 Years Old. Does It Still Apply?
In 1952, Henri Cartier-Bresson published "Images à la Sauvette," a collection of 126 photographs with a cover designed by Henri Matisse. The American edition, published the same year by Simon and Schuster, was titled "The Decisive Moment," and that phrase entered photography's vocabulary so completely that it has shaped how photographers think about their medium ever since.
AI Can Make a Picture, That Doesn't Make It a Photograph
I still use AI. I'm not out here trying to churn butter by hand in a cabin while yelling at electricity. I use the tools. I test the tools. I've built workflows around the tools when they save time, cut friction, or keep me from doing some repetitive task that makes my soul feel like it got trapped in a printer jam. I'm not precious about it. If a tool works, I use it.
The Exact Zone Focusing Settings a Street Photographer Uses for Four Lenses
Zone focusing is one of the fastest ways to shoot on the street, and most people either don't know how to set it up or don't trust it enough to actually use it. Jeff Ascough has built his entire street shooting practice around it, skipping autofocus almost entirely in favor of pre-set distances and depth of field.
This 40-Year-Old Camera Still Shoots Stunning Black-and-White Landscapes
Lightroom Classic 15.4 Just Dropped Three Upgrades Worth Knowing About
How to Sharpen Wildlife Photos in Lightroom and Photoshop (And When to Use Each)
Why Buying New Gear Rarely Makes You a Better Photographer
I love G.A.S. (Gear Acquisition Syndrome). I really do. But being as "stony broke" as I am, I am very restricted in the purchases I can actually make. That being said, if I had the means, I would be up to my eyeballs in all the new shiny things. It's a siren song we all hear: "Surely if I just had this—insert arbitrary piece of gear here—my images would finally be the best."
Everyone Assumes the First Weather Satellites Used Film. The Real Story Is Far Stranger.
When Hurricane Camille filled the Gulf of Mexico in August 1969, satellites watched it the entire way in. The storm came ashore on the Mississippi coast as a Category 5 with sustained winds of 175 mph and a storm surge of more than 24 feet, and it killed more than 250 people. It would have killed many more if forecasters had not seen it coming from space. The Weather Bureau later estimated that the warnings and evacuations enabled by modern tracking and forecasting may have saved as many as 50,000 lives.



