Why Shooting With Camera Glasses Feels Both Brilliant and Awkward

Smart glasses are no longer a concept tucked away in sci-fi. With cameras embedded directly into eyewear, you can shoot hands-free in moments when pulling out a phone would slow you down. That opens the door to capturing experiences in ways that feel more immediate and less staged.

DJI’s Osmo 360 Brings 8K Action to the U.S.

The DJI Osmo 360 Action Camera has finally landed in the U.S., giving you another serious option in the crowded 360 market. With Insta360 and GoPro already battling it out, DJI’s entrance is important because it means more innovation, more choices, and better tools for you to tell stories in ways that a traditional camera can’t. Here's a look at what you can expect.

The Art of Rural Photojournalism: What Big-City Photographers Can Learn From Small-Town Assignments

The smell of fry bread and livestock hits you first at the Sanpete County Fair. Kids in dusty boots weave through the crowd with ribbons in hand, 4-H leaders shout instructions over the hum of the rodeo announcer, and the late-afternoon sun cuts sharp shadows across the midway. I’ve covered this fair more times than I can count, and every year it reminds me how different small-town assignments are from the big-city work that dominates so much of the photography conversation.

Why the Nikon Z5 II Could Be the Best Value in Full Frame

The Nikon Z5 II stands out because it gives you a full frame camera body without a massive price tag. You get access to modern features like in-body image stabilization and advanced autofocus, making it a practical tool whether you’re hiking before sunrise, shooting portraits, or capturing wildlife.

Lens Adapters Demystified: What Works, What Doesn't, and How to Pick the Right One

Adapters are the bridge between today’s mirrorless bodies and yesterday’s affordable glass, but not all bridges feel the same underfoot. This guide explains how adapters work in practice, what usually delivers the best autofocus, which types of adapters exist (and when to use each), plus the real-world pitfalls that trip people up.

Is the Nikon 24-70mm f/2.8 S II Worth the Upgrade?

The Nikon NIKKOR Z 24-70mm f/2.8 S II covers one of the most versatile focal ranges in photography and brings upgrades that matter if you spend long hours shooting. The mix of weight savings, optical improvements, and better handling makes it a serious option if you need a reliable standard zoom.

Why This $168 Autofocus Lens Could Be Your Next Walkaround

A compact lens with autofocus at just $168 is not something you see every day. If you’ve been waiting for a small, budget-friendly option that still feels like a serious tool in your hands, this release could be worth a closer look.

Viltrox 15mm f/1.7 Air E Review: Tiny Wide Lens

The Viltrox AF 15mm f/1.7 Air lens is the widest option in the company’s lightweight Air lineup. Its size and speed make it appealing for anyone who wants a compact tool for wide views, but that comes with some trade-offs you’ll want to know about before picking it up.

5 DSLR Cameras Worth Buying in 2025

Before you drop $3,000+ on another mirrorless body, consider these five DSLRs that still solve real jobs better than the spec sheet suggests. From IBIS in a DSLR and 153-point AF at 10 fps to base ISO 64 dynamic range and built-in Astrotracer, these proven bodies deliver client-ready files, deep lens ecosystems, and prices that leave room for glass.

Evoto AI: The Best Retouching Software for Photographers?

When it comes to retouching software, many photographers have felt disappointed by the promise of an easy yet professional editing solution. Could Evoto AI be the dream editing suite we have all been waiting for? Today we take a look under the hood.

How Apple's Accessibility Features Are Giving Creativity Back

A diagnosis of Parkinson’s changes how you move, how you create, and how you remember. When tremors interfere with something as important as filming your child or celebrating with family, the ability to hold on to those moments becomes even more important.

The Tamron 18-300mm Review: One Lens to Do It All?

The Tamron 18-300mm f/3.5-6.3 Di III-A VC VXD lens gives you the kind of reach that can replace several lenses in one. That matters because you don’t always want to carry a full kit when traveling or working in unpredictable conditions. Weight, convenience, and flexibility matter as much as pure image quality.

Behind the Scenes: Heart Rock Night Photo

Yes, there's really a rock in the shape of a heart in Joshua Tree National Park! This is the story behind this night photo, including how I went about lighting it.

VSCO Launches Workspace, a Customizable CRM for Photographers

VSCO has introduced VSCO Workspace, a studio and client-management platform that integrates the Táve Studio Manager CRM and adds new tools aimed at helping photographers run day-to-day operations in one place. The software is designed to scale from solo operators to multi-person studios, with an emphasis on workflow automation and business organization.

The Myth of the Bridezilla: Leading With Empathy in Wedding Photography

Photographers are often asked about their “worst bridezilla” stories. My answer is always the same: I don’t use that term. I don’t appreciate its sexist origins, and I don’t believe it reflects reality. The bridezilla stereotype paints brides as self-centered, high-maintenance figures on their wedding day. In truth, the behavior people label this way is often the product of immense stress and societal expectations, especially in cisgender, heterosexual relationships.

How to Read a Lens Spec Sheet Like a Pro

Spec sheets can look like alphabet soup—ED, ASPH, OIS, STM, USM, MFD, 0.5×—but each line quietly predicts how a lens will behave on a job. This guide strips out the marketing and shows you what matters, why it matters, and how to make smarter buys from your desk. No test charts needed; just practical translation from spec to outcome.

Sigma’s 200mm f/2 Sports Lens Could Be the New Portrait King

The Sigma 200mm f/2 DG OS Sports lens is the kind of lens that makes you stop and take notice. A bright f/2 aperture at 200mm is rare, and Sigma has managed to package it into something lighter and more manageable than its older rivals while keeping the build and image quality up to a professional level.

Why This Camera Makes You Want to Shoot Every Day

The Fujifilm X100 series has always been wildly popular, and for good reason. Its compact design, fixed lens, and film-like rendering have made it a favorite for people who want a camera that feels simple yet powerful. More than specs, though, what matters is how a camera changes the way you see and photograph, and the X100 has done that for many.

Are Sigma and Panasonic Coming for Canon, Nikon, and Sony?

Every so often, a product launch doesn’t just release something new. Rather, it changes the tone of an entire ecosystem. This is what Sigma has just done with two lenses that, on their own, would be remarkable, but together feel like a tectonic movement. And they show that the big three (Canon, Nikon, and Sony), might be on notice.

Why Film Photography’s Revival Refuses to Die: Insights for 2025

Thomas Heaton drops a quick gut check on the state of film: remember when old point-and-shoots gathered dust in thrift stores, then suddenly became flex pieces on Instagram? Overnight, Contax compacts leapt from a few hundred bucks to nosebleed prices. That wave carried a lot of us back into the darkroom.

How to Fix Harsh Light With Simple Lightroom Masks

Shooting in harsh midday sunlight is something you’ll probably avoid whenever you can, but sometimes it’s your only option. That kind of light can leave you with dull results, which makes editing an essential part of the process.

Master Photographer Brownie Harris Marks 50 Years With Retrospective Release

Photographer Brownie Harris has spent five decades capturing both the famous and the ordinary, with a portfolio that stretches from John F. Kennedy Jr. to factory workers and Hollywood sets. Earlier this year, Harris released Brownie Harris Retrospective 1970–2020, a book that brought together a lifetime of images and stories.

Sigma’s 12mm f/1.4 Brings Ultra Wide and Bright Together

Sigma has added something unusual to the APS-C lens lineup. A 12mm f/1.4 ultra wide angle lens opens up creative options you don’t normally get at this focal length, especially if you want to work in low light or experiment with depth of field. This means more flexibility whether you’re shooting landscapes, interiors, or even the night sky.

Nikon Z DX 18-140mm VR Lens Review: A One-Lens Travel Solution

The Nikon NIKKOR Z DX 18-140mm f/3.5-6.3 VR lens promises to be a versatile option for your APS-C Nikon Z camera. Its wide focal range makes it appealing if you want a single lens that can cover both wide angle landscapes and tighter telephoto shots without breaking the bank.

Extreme Macro on a Budget: Mitakon’s New 55mm f/2.8 1-5x Lens

Zhong Yi Optics has introduced the Mitakon 55mm f/2.8 1-5x Macro, a $399 manual focus prime built for both full frame and medium format cameras. Offering up to 5x magnification, it gives photographers a chance to capture the smallest details without stepping into prohibitively expensive territory.

5 Reasons Why Global Shutter Isn’t Essential for Most Shooters

Every few months, the internet decides that “this” is the future of cameras. Lately, that “this” is global shutter—a sensor that reads the entire frame at once, promising zero skew, perfect flash sync, and freedom from LED banding. It’s impressive technology, but for most photographers and hybrid creators, it isn’t the upgrade that moves the needle. Here’s why, plus how to get clean, professional results right now with the gear you already own.

Viltrox 135mm f/1.8 LAB Lens Review: Sharp Results at Half the Price

The Viltrox AF 135mm f/1.8 LAB lens stands out because it combines speed, sharpness, and price in a way that challenges far more expensive options. At this focal length, you’re looking at a tool made for striking subject isolation, making it particularly valuable when you want portraits or detail shots with impact.

RockNRoller R9 Mighty Cart Review: The All-Terrain Gear Hauler Your Back Has Been Waiting For

There is a moment in every photographer’s career when a single camera bag is no longer enough. Maybe it starts with one C-stand, then a sandbag, a hard case of lenses, a power station, and before you know it, you are making three trips back to the car. This is the point where you have to stop looking for a bigger bag and start looking for a smarter solution. RockNRoller has long been a staple for road crews, and its new R9 Mighty series is aimed squarely at creatives who want that same level of reliability offroad and on mixed terrain.

Why the 24-105mm Might Be the Lens You Actually Need

If you’re looking at standard zooms, you’ve probably noticed the choice between the 24-70mm f/2.8 and the 24-105mm f/4. The first is faster and sharper on paper, but there’s more to choosing a lens than just speed and sharpness.

Nikon Z 14-30mm f/4 vs Tamron 16-30mm f/2.8: Which Wide Zoom Wins?

The Nikon Z 14-30mm f/4 S and the Tamron 16-30mm f/2.8 G2 both cover the wide angle range you need for landscapes, travel, and even astro work. Deciding between them matters because the choice affects not only sharpness and weight but also what conditions you can shoot in without carrying multiple lenses.

The Nikon Z50 II and 180-600mm in Action with Australian Shorebirds

Shorebirds in Australia are striking, not just for their beauty but for the skill it takes to capture them. They move fast, they appear and disappear with the tides, and if you don’t know their feeding habits, you’ll come home with empty memory cards.

OM SYSTEM OM-1 Mark II Shows Surprising Strength Against Full Frame Camera Rivals

The OM SYSTEM OM-1 Mark II mirrorless camera is designed to solve one of the biggest challenges you face in the field: balancing performance with portability. When you spend long hours outside carrying heavy gear, every pound matters, and having the right setup can mean the difference between getting the shot or missing it.

Lightroom Sliders You’re Probably Using Wrong

Lightroom is full of small controls that can quietly ruin your images if you don’t understand how they interact. The difference between an artificial edit and a clean, natural one often comes down to how you balance the simplest tools. When you know which sliders are tricking you, you can stop fighting the program and start getting results that feel intentional.

Tamron 18-300mm Review: The One-Lens Travel Solution

A single lens that can move from wide landscapes to close wildlife without weighing down your bag is always worth your attention. When you want to capture fleeting moments without swapping glass, the Tamron 18-300mm f/3.5-6.3 Di III-A VC VXD lens is built for that purpose.

The Film Camera That Refuses to Fade

The Nikon FE2 isn’t just another film camera sitting on a shelf. It’s one of those rare tools that carries history in its mechanics, a companion that shapes how you see the world through a viewfinder. Film cameras like this remind you that the way you shoot is often as important as the images you make.

My Thoughts—and Solution—To The Film vs. Digital Debate

Some say film photography is better than digital. Film has a more organic, natural look. Shooting with an analogue camera is a better experience and a purer form of photography. Others say digital photography is better because computer technology makes photography easier. You can shoot more frames and focus quicker, and experiment more by shooting more without the need for a second mortgage. Buckle up, this might get ranty.

The Essential Photography Kit I Didn’t Know I Needed

As someone who first picked up a camera at 10 years old and has been shooting professionally for the last 20 years, I thought I had everything I needed in my kit bag. That is, until I came across the NEEWER PS099S Mini V Mount Battery, now an essential kit item that I don’t plan location shoots without.

Sigma’s New 17-40mm f/1.8 Could Replace Your Primes

The Sigma 17-40mm f/1.8 DC Art lens is a rare kind of zoom. It covers popular focal lengths like 24mm and 35mm, both staples in everyday shooting, while offering a wide maximum aperture that replaces several primes at once. Having this kind of flexibility in a single compact lens can change how you carry your kit and how you approach different types of work.