Featured Articles
What Photography Asks of You
I've never been able to decide whether writing is more demanding than photography or the other way around. Every few years I convince myself I have the answer, and then something happens that proves me wrong.
Photographing the Perseid Meteor Shower: A Practical Guide
The Perseid meteor shower is often the most spectacular meteor shower in the Northern Hemisphere due to frequency as well as its appearance in summer. 2026 is special because the peak occurs during the darkest possible skies. Here's how to photograph it!
How to Stop Your Timer Remote From Dangling: Ruggard RTC-10 Review
If you shoot long exposures at night, you know the frustration — your intervalometer dangling from your camera, swinging in the breeze, pulling on the cable. Not good. The Ruggard RTC-10 Timer-Remote Case (Standard) fixes that with a padded holder that straps directly to your tripod leg. It works great, with one Velcro gripe we'll get to shortly.
The Lightroom Panel Most Landscape Shooters Underuse
Warm highlights, cool shadows, and a foreground green cast that has to go: this is the color puzzle behind most sunset landscapes. Getting those tones to feel intentional rather than accidental is the difference between a flat raw file and an image people stop scrolling to look at.
Can a Zoom Lens Match a Prime for Astrophotography?
A 12-20mm zoom at f/2.8 sits right in the sweet spot for astrophotography, wide enough to swallow the Milky Way and fast enough to pull in faint starlight. Most shooters reach for a prime when the sky gets dark, which makes a zoom that can keep pace worth a real look.
The Faintest Planet Ever Imaged From Earth Was Hiding in 11 Years of Old Photos
Astronomers have directly imaged the faintest exoplanet ever seen from Earth, a gas giant called Beta Pictoris d — and it turns out the planet had been sitting in telescope archives for more than 11 years before anyone managed to pull it out of the noise.
Would an Ansel Adams Photo Flop on Instagram Today?
Strip Ansel Adams of his name, his reputation, and his place in history, then hand him a fresh account with zero followers. How many likes does "Monolith, the Face of Half Dome" actually pull? That thought experiment cuts straight into how you judge your own images and whether follower counts have anything to do with artistic worth.
Three Camera Raw Features You Might Have Missed
Camera Raw quietly gained a set of tools that fix a problem you have probably fought with for years: masks that stop short of the leaves, the hair, or the edge where you actually need them. Two new sliders now let you push a mask outward or pull it back, and they work on the specific mask types you reach for most.
Storm Chasers Are Flying Drones Straight Into Tornadoes, and the View Is Unreal
A small crew of storm chasers is doing something that sounds impossible: flying camera drones straight into active tornadoes. The OTUS Project — short for Observations of Tornadoes by UAV Systems — has now pulled off more than a dozen successful intercepts, and this June it live-streamed a drone punching into an EF3 for the first time.
What the Upcoming Copyright Office Fee Increase Means for Photographers
The U.S. Copyright Office has officially started the clock on a significant fee change that will impact how photographers protect their work. On July 14, 2026, the office submitted its final proposed fee schedule to Congress. This triggers a statutory 120-day review period, meaning that unless Congress intervenes, a new set of higher fees will automatically go into effect in mid-November 2026. For working pros and serious enthusiasts who regularly register their images, this policy update shifts the baseline economics of their practices.
Patreon Is Blocking AI Scrapers, but It's Already Too Late
Patreon just started actively blocking the AI bots that scrape creators' work to train models, and it's good to see a platform plant a flag on the creators' side. I just wouldn't mistake it for protection.
What Is Base ISO and Why Does It Gives the Cleanest Photos?
If you have spent any time reading about camera settings, you have heard the advice to keep your ISO as low as possible for the cleanest image. The lowest normal ISO setting your sensor is built around has a name: base ISO. Understanding what it is, and why files shot there look better than files shot anywhere else, is one of those small pieces of knowledge that quietly improves every photo you take. It explains why your daylight shots look so crisp, why your dim indoor shots get grainy, and when it is worth chasing the lowest number versus letting it climb.
Review of the ThinkTank Focuspoint 30L Backpack
For my photo tour in Iceland, I wanted to go lightweight. I had my eye on the new Think Tank FocusPoint 30L because it just looks great. Amazingly, my gear did fit in this compact photo backpack, and I took it with me to Iceland. Let me tell you about my experiences.
PolarPro’s Controversial Portra Film-Inspired Filter. What’s Going On?
About six months ago, PolarPro sent me their new Portra filter. On their website it states, "Inspired by the look and feel of Portra 400 film… the Portra Filter blends color tone, diffusion, and glare reduction into one optical filter for a finished look." Hmm, sorry, it looks nothing like Portra 400 film. And I hadn't even put the filter on my camera at this point. I simply looked at the sample photos on their website, and thought about all the photos I've shot on Portra film.
Inside the Unbelievable 50-Minute Single Take That Made "Adolescence"
"Adolescence" pulled off something most productions only pretend to do: four episodes, each filmed as a single continuous take, no stitched cuts hiding in the shadows. The internet split over whether the show cheated, and the answer sits right in the gear the crew chose to carry.
Nikon's 35mm f/1.4 vs. the 35mm f/1.8 S: Which One Wins?
Nikon sells three different 35mm prime lenses for the Z mount, and picking between them comes down to details that specs alone won't reveal. The gap between the Nikon 35mm f/1.4 and the Nikon 35mm f/1.8 S is smaller than the labels suggest.
How Classic Movies Faked Their Biggest Stunts
Movie stunts that look impossible almost always come down to a physical problem someone had to solve, whether that meant building a 330 ft miniature bridge or strapping an actor to a helicopter at 75 mph.
Why Do Photographers Think They Can Judge Every Genre but Their Own?
One of the strangest things about photography isn't the endless debate over cameras, editing software, or artificial intelligence. It is the quiet assumption that mastering one photographic discipline somehow grants authority over every other one.
This Kylie Jenner Ad Hides a Disturbing Secret: You Just Have to Stand in the Right Spot
Walk past a certain bus stop near Meta's London headquarters and you see a glossy campaign shot: Kylie Jenner in a pair of the company's smart glasses. Step to the side and the poster becomes a black-and-white X-ray of her face under the words "We're always watching."
An AI Studio Made Its Own Odyssey and Timed It to Nolan's Opening
Christopher Nolan's The Odyssey opens today, shot entirely on IMAX 70mm for a reported $250 million. Three days before it reached theaters, an AI studio announced an Odyssey of its own: 135 minutes long, made largely by one person over three months, for a budget in the mid five figures.
New York City Wants Landlords to Admit When Listing Photos Are AI
New York City wants landlords and brokers to tell you when the photos in a rental listing have been generated or retouched by AI. It arrived as one of 23 proposals in Mayor Zohran Mamdani's Rental Ripoff Report, and if it becomes a real rule, the people shooting those listings are the ones who will have to draw the line.
How to Make Flat Light Work for Your Portraits
Flat light gets a bad reputation. The moment the sky turns from blue to a sheet of gray cloud, a lot of photographers pack up, assuming the good light is gone for the day. That instinct is backward. Soft, flat, overcast light is one of the most forgiving and flattering kinds of natural light there is, and the only reason it disappoints people is that they treat it as a finished product rather than a starting point. Learn a few simple ways to shape it, and a dull gray day becomes some of the easiest portrait light you will ever work with. This is about natural light specifically: no strobes, no flash, just the daylight you already have and a couple of inexpensive tools to bend it your way.
Netflix Faked VHS, Nolan Shot Real Film: Digital Perfection Is Losing Its Appeal
Netflix just spent real engineering time making its biggest show look worse, on purpose. It's not the only surprising analog bet this summer — Christopher Nolan shot a $250 million blockbuster entirely on physical film — and neither is nostalgia. It's a signal about what audiences want that every photographer and videographer should notice.
Vacation or Photo Shoot? The Trap of Traveling as a Photographer
Travel is one of the best ways to learn history, to experience new foods and cultures, and to find inspiration. But when a photographer travels for personal fulfillment, it can be tricky to balance the "photographer" and the person.
Two OM System White Lenses, One Coast, and a 1,000mm Reach Test
An 800mm equivalent lens that fits in a hand and a 1,000mm equivalent monster share the same day out on the Welsh coast. That kind of reach used to mean carrying gear you could barely lift, and the shift toward smaller sensors covering it is one of the more interesting developments in wildlife photography right now.