Photography News

How To Photograph Silhouettes In 5 Simple Steps

 

1. Pick A Strong Subject

As silhouettes don't have any detail and are, essentially, just an outline, picking a subject that has a recognisable shape and strong detail around the edge will produce shots that are more interesting. Possible subject choices include:

  • Big wheels at fairgrounds or those found in cities.
  • Statues which can be found in most parks and gardens.
  • Trees, particularly on misty mornings.
  • Tunnels or bridges make great frames for subjects when silhouetted.
  • People but remember that shooting them side on will show more shape when still. 
  • People in action - if they're jumping or forming an interesting frame with their legs and arms, shooting straight on can work well.
  2. Choose A Light Source 

Any subject that is surrounded by bright tones can easily appear as a silhouette. The most obvious light source to use is the sun as you can use it at the beach, in town, in your garden or even inside as long as you're working near a large window or close to a set of patio doors. But really you can use any light source, you just need to make sure it sits behind your subject.

 

3. Switch The Flash Off

When you take your camera out of its bag and use auto mode to take a shot of your subject sat against a bright background, generally the flash will fire to lighten the foreground and even out the exposure. This is usually fine but as we want to deliberately underexpose our subject, you need to make sure the flash is turned off.

 


 

4. Underexpose Your Shot When working in auto mode, most point and shoot cameras will work out the exposure and where it needs to focus when you press the shutter button halfway. So to trick it into creating a silhouette, simply point the camera at the brightest part of the scene you're photographing, press the shutter halfway down and don't let go of it. Re-frame the shot then press the shutter button the rest of the way to take your shot. This should fool the camera into giving you the exposure you want but you may have to try exposing from different parts of the image to create the silhouette you're looking for. Try using the Sunset Mode too to further enhance the silhouette you're trying to create.
  5. Check The Shot's Focus

The problem with half-pressing the shutter button to get the exposure you need is that the camera will also focus on that spot too which can mean your silhouette can lack crispness. If this happens and you can adjust the focus manually, pre-focus before you take your meter reading. You could try using Landscape mode as this will let the camera know you want to use a small aperture so your shot has front to back sharpness. If your camera features exposure compensation you'll be able to select -1 or -2 to deliberately underexpose your shot. This means you shouldn't have any problems with focusing either as you won't have to move the camera.

 

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Categories: Photography News

4 Simple Ways To Ensure Horizons Are Straight In Your Landscape Shots

    Wonky horizons are the bane of many landscape and cityscape photographers as a horizon that's slightly off-tilt can spoil what's otherwise a perfectly good shot. Of course, there will be times when holding your camera at an angle so the horizon line is deliberately not straight but if you do want to do this, make sure it's really obvious as otherwise, it'll just look like you forgot to check your frame before hitting the shutter button.   How To Straighten Horizons    1. Line it up with the bottom or top of your frame   The easiest way to ensure you have horizontal horizons is to line it up with the bottom or top of your frame, either in your viewfinder or on the LCD screen. Some cameras also have a digital spirit level feature which will indicate to you when the camera is level  - both on the horizontal and vertical planes. It can be displayed in the viewfinder or on the back monitor when using Live View, along with all your other settings. When the marker is in the middle of the gauge and turns green, you know you're level.     2. Rule of thirds grid  If you don't have a digital spirit level, have a look in your camera's menu options to see if there's a rule of thirds grid. We know this isn't designed for this purpose but the grid will have horizontal lines on it that can be a handy guide when you're looking for a quick way to check the horizon.          3. Use a spirit level Another option is to purchase a spirit level that sits on your camera's hot shoe and to use a tripod as you're more likely to move / not hold the camera straight when you shooting hand-held.      4. Post Production  Of course, you can always straighten your images in whatever editing software you use as well but it's good practise to get it right in-camera whenever possible.    

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Categories: Photography News

OM System Survived Its Split From Olympus: Who Expected This?

FStoppers - Sun 10 May 2026 10:03pm

When Olympus sold its imaging division to Japan Industrial Partners on January 1, 2021, the new company was called OM Digital Solutions. The OM SYSTEM product brand arrived later, announced in October 2021 as the name the company would put on its cameras going forward. Most of the photography press wrote the obituary in advance of either event. The division had been unprofitable for years. Olympus itself, after more than eighty years of making cameras, was exiting the business. Micro Four Thirds had lost the sensor-size argument in the public imagination to APS-C and full frame.

[Read More]

Categories: Photography News

An Impressive Ultra-Wide Lens For APS-C: 7Artisans AF 10mm F2.8 Z

FStoppers - Sun 10 May 2026 5:03pm

APS-C cameras are quickly becoming the main choice for everyday photography. I've owned a Nikon Z50 for seven years now, and it's still my favorite everyday camera, especially for travel, street, and urban photography. But finding lenses for it has always been a problem. 

[Read More]

Categories: Photography News

Why I Still Use a Gimbal in 2026

FStoppers - Sun 10 May 2026 4:03pm

It seems everybody is retiring their gimbals. Every time I look at social media, I hear people talking about: does anybody use a gimbal anymore? Or you'll see videos where people are talking about gear they regret buying, and a gimbal is usually on that list. 

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Categories: Photography News

Simple Evening Walk Proves You Don't Need a Great Location for Great Photos

FStoppers - Sun 10 May 2026 1:03pm

Shooting on a walk through a quiet English village sounds like the kind of thing you'd do when you've run out of ideas. Andrew Banner's latest video proves it's actually one of the most effective ways to sharpen your eye. 

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Categories: Photography News

Why Your Most Personal Photos Shouldn't Come From Your Main Camera

FStoppers - Sun 10 May 2026 12:03pm

Choosing a dedicated snapshot camera changes how you shoot, and the Ricoh GR IV is one of the more interesting options for that role right now. This video makes a compelling case that serious shooters are missing something by always being in "photography mode," and that having a second camera specifically for personal snapshots can fill a gap that even a smartphone can't. 

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Categories: Photography News

Full Frame vs. APS-C in 2026: The Case for Going Smaller

FStoppers - Sun 10 May 2026 11:03am

The idea that full frame is the "serious photographer's" destination has shaped how people spend money on gear for decades. In 2026, that assumption deserves a hard look, because the lens market, sensor technology, and real-world shooting habits have all shifted in ways that change the math. 

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Categories: Photography News

How to Use Doorways to Frame, Balance, and Pose Your Subjects

FStoppers - Sun 10 May 2026 10:03am

Doors are one of the most underused compositional tools in photography, and once you start seeing them, you can't unsee them. Whether you're shooting portraits or working the streets, a well-placed door can frame a subject, anchor a composition, or tell a story in a single frame. 

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Categories: Photography News

14 Essential Tips For A Great Photo Walk

DIGITAL PHOTOGRAPHY NEWS FROM ePHOTOzine - Sun 10 May 2026 2:26am

 

With warmer weather finally arriving, it's a good time to take your camera on a planned photo walk. This, of course, could be on a paid-for type of course but you can also design your own. Staying as close or venturing as far as you like from your home.

 

1. Check The Weather

Have a look online and on the TV the night before you leave and on the morning of your walk. If you're off hill walking low cloud's not good news if you want to walk higher up and blistering, bright sunshine isn't a photographer's friend no matter where you walk. There's more chance of you dehydrating too on a warmer day so either wait for cooler temperatures or pack plenty of water if you're still going to head out in it.
 

2. Dress For The Weather

Stick your head out of the door and see what the weather's like and if it is sunny do still pack a waterproof just in case.
 

3. Tell People You're Going 

Make sure someone at home knows where you're going and give them an estimated time of when you'll be back so if you do get lost, they'll know to come and find you. Take your mobile with you so they can contact you but do remember you can't get a signal in some remote locations.
 

4. Plan A Route

Don't be over adventurous as you, plus kit and stopping to take photos means, generally, you won't have the time to walk very far. A quick, short route that circles back on itself will be fine, in fact, a one/two-hour walk that takes you into a town/village or just around the area you live in would be perfectly good if you've not tried a photography walk before. If you do want to venture into the countryside you might not want to climb up to many steep hills on your first walk but you don't have to get too high to shoot interesting sweeping vistas. Try walking along the side of a river or through the woods instead.
 

5. Capture A Variety Of Imagery 

Of course, there will be plenty of wide landscapes to capture out of the city but don't overlook shooting a few close up shots too. Look out for flowers, interesting patterns in bark and insects on your trail. If you see something in the distance, a waterfall for example, but don't have the time or energy to get closer to it use the pulling power of a longer focal length to bring it to you. This will help isolate it from the wider scene and also bring detail into the shot that may not have been seen if you shot it with a wide lens. Closer to home get up higher to stop problems with converging verticals and this will also give you the chance to capture some cityscapes. In between the buildings look for reflections and interesting detail/patterns roof tiles, brickwork, fences and other objects create.

 

 

6. Pack The Right Lenses

Wide-angle zooms are good for capturing sweeping landscapes with interesting foregrounds while telephoto zoom lenses are good for picking out detail and compressing perspective. To save on weight pack just one zoom lens that covers all the focal points you need. For close up work, pack a macro lens.


7. A Tripod Is A Must 

It's always a good idea to take a tripod along, particularly for landscapes, where the built-in spirit level will help you ensure your horizons are straight. You'll also need one if you're planning on stopping to shoot some slow shutter speed shots of lakes, rivers and waterfalls. If you're planning a long-ish walk you'll need a light-weight model. Pack your remote shutter release with your tripod too for those slow shutter speed shots where shake will really be noticed.
 

8. You'll Need A Good Pair Of Shoes

You need a pair of shoes/boots that are comfy, it's a good idea to make sure they're waterproof and you'll thank them at the end of your walk if they support your ankles. Having a good sole which gives good traction is also a must if you're heading off the pavement.
 

9. Remember The Filters

Find the room in your camera bag for a polarising filter and an ND filter as they don't take up too much space but are very helpful tools on sunny days when you need to use slower shutter speeds or when reflections are a problem. An ND Grad filter can be useful too for balancing out the exposure of the sky and ground.
 

10. Pick The Right Camera Bag 

If you're off on a long walk, as well as having space for your camera and lenses make sure there's room for spare clothing, water, food and a compass.  But don't carry a bag that's too big, though, as walking is tiring enough on its own without having to carry a large bag that's half empty.

 

 

11. Always Carry Spare Batteries And Memory

You don't want to run out of power or space to store your photos when you're only halfway through your walk so always pack extra.

 

12. Don't Forget The Torch

If you're planning on photographing sunrises you'll be setting your kit up and walking while it's still dark and without a torch, this can be a little tricky. So your hands are free, take a head torch with you to light the way. Of course, if you're staying closer to home you'll have street lights so this item's not something you'll need in your bag.

 

13. Other Essential Accessories You Will Need 

Take a lens cloth to wipe dust and moister off your lens, a lens hood will help stop glare, a compass will guide you along your chosen route and a map will stop you getting lost. If you're heading out for quite a few hours make sure you take food, water and plenty of snacks with you. Make sure the clothing you're wearing is lightweight and it's often better to layer up rather than heading out in just one coat. If it's a sunny day pack your sun cream as even if there's a slight covering of cloud, the sun will still get you if you're out in it all day.

 

14. Find A Friend To Walk With You 

Taking a short walk on your own is fine but if you're going on a four-mile hike take someone else with you so if you do get lost or worse still injured, you won't just have yourself to rely on. If you're going with a none-photographer they may also help you carry your equipment and hold your bag while you're taking your shots. Do go with someone who has a slight interest in photography though as they can help you look for good locations to shoot in/of and if they don't have an interest in photography at all they'll just get bored of stopping and waiting for you to take your photos.
 

 

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Categories: Photography News

ePHOTOzine Daily Theme Winners Week 1 May 2026

DIGITAL PHOTOGRAPHY NEWS FROM ePHOTOzine - Sat 9 May 2026 11:25pm

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The latest winner of our popular daily photography theme which takes place in our forums have been chosen and congratulations go to p1yu5h (Day 3- 'Dandelions').

 

Daily Theme Runners-Up

If you didn't win this time, keep uploading your images to the daily competition forum for another chance to win! If you're new to the Daily Theme, you can find out more about it in the Daily Theme Q&A

Well done to our latest runners-up, too, whose images you can take a look at below.

  Day 1

City Shoot

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Day 2

'Quick' Theme

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Day 4

Lighthouse In The Landscape

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Day 5

Trains

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  Day 6

Hedgerows

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Day 7

Seaside Captures

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Day 8

'Old vs New' Theme

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You’ll find the Daily Themes, along with other great photo competitions, over in our Forum. Take a look to see the latest daily photo contests. Open to all levels of photographer, you’re sure to find a photography competition to enter. Why not share details of competitions with our community? Join the camaraderie and upload an image to our Gallery.

Categories: Photography News

The Power of Almost Nothing: Why the Square Frame Changes Everything in Street Photography

FStoppers - Sat 9 May 2026 10:03pm

There's a strange misconception in street photography: that more is more. More chaos. More layers. More subjects. More "decisive moments." 

But what if the real power lies somewhere else entirely? What if the strongest images are the ones that almost don't exist? And what if the format itself is the first, decisive cut?

[Read More]

Categories: Photography News

Comparing 6 Best AI Noise Reduction Software for Low-Light Photography

 

Low-light photography always comes with a tradeoff: raise the ISO, and you get the shot, but also noise. In fleeting moments, whether shooting wildlife, handheld street scenes, or live events, there’s no second chance to adjust settings or reshoot. Capturing the moment comes first, and improving image quality happens later in post-processing.

While AI image denoisers are designed to reduce image noise while preserving natural texture, different tools strike this balance in various ways. To help you find the best fit for your workflow, I’ve tested several leading photo denoising software across common real-world scenarios, comparing how each handles the delicate line between noise removal and detail retention.

 

How AI Denoising Restores Images with Natural Details

Traditional noise reduction often removed grain through heavy smoothing, which could leave images looking soft and lose important texture, especially in low-light photos. Instead of simply blurring noise, modern AI tools like Aiarty Image Enhancer intelligently separate noise from real detail to preserve edges, texture, and structural integrity. It is designed for real-world photography workflows, helping recover clean image quality from high-ISO, low-light, or compressed photos.

 

Test methodology:

To ensure a practical comparison, all images were captured in real-world low-light conditions rather than a controlled studio:

  • ISO range: 3200–12800 
  • Formats: Mix of RAW and JPEG 
  • Shooting conditions: Handheld, low ambient light, no additional lighting
  • Aiarty is used as the starting reference in this testing. You can get a free trial to test it on your own files, with several other leading tools compared below to show how different approaches handle real-world denoising.

 

Case Study 1: Wildlife (Fur Detail Under Low Light)

Wildlife photography often requires high ISO settings during the "golden hours" of dawn or dusk. The challenge lies in separating fine fur or feather textures from noise, especially in underexposed areas. Traditional tools often smudge these textures, leaving backgrounds blotchy and subjects soft.

Using a squirrel image as an example, where noise appears in both the background and fur, Aiarty Image Enhancer maintains natural and detailed look of the squirrel’s fur, with clear texture instead of being turned into flat areas.

 

Testing Aiarty Image Enhancer: More-Detail GAN v3 model, x2 upscaled, 0.95 Strength

 

You can also control how strong the denoising is with the Strength option. By adjusting the Strength slider, photographers can retain a hint of organic grain for a more "atmospheric" shot or opt for a 100% clean, clinical output for high-end prints.

 

Testing Aiarty Image Enhancer: denoise strength 50% vs 100% 

 

Case Study 2: Low-light Indoor Photography

Indoor scenes with mixed artificial lighting, such as portraits or interior shots, frequently suffer from grain across smooth surfaces like skin, walls, and furniture. Aggressive image noise reduction often results in a "plastic" look where skin textures are over-smoothed and fabric details disappear. 

Aiarty Image Enhancer effectively reduces image noise while preserving subject detail and natural texture. It cleans up grain in low-light interiors without sacrificing the natural micro-textures of skin or wood, ensuring that lighting transitions remain smooth and balanced.

 

Testing Aiarty Image Enhancer: Real-Photo v3, slightly color corrected

 

Case Study 3: Night Photography (Gradient Noise and Color Artifacts)

Night photography presents a unique challenge: managing noise in vast, smooth areas like dark skies and deep shadows. High ISOs often introduce chroma noise (color speckling), which can cause banding in gradients and a loss of depth in the shadows.

While many photo denoising tools struggle with shadow depth, Aiarty Image Enhancer eliminates color artifacts while keeping gradients fluid. Skies remain clean and even, and shadows retain their tonal depth, preventing the "flat" look common in over-processed night shots.

 

Testing Aiarty Image Enhancer: More-Detail GAN v3, slightly color corrected

 

2026 Best AI Photo Denoisers Compared

Aiarty Image Enhancer is a powerful AI denoise and upscale tool. Designed for real-world photos, it effectively removes noise while preserving fine details and natural textures. 

That said, there’s no one-size-fits-all solution for image denoising. Different image denoising tools are optimized for different needs—whether it’s RAW photo processing, fast batch cleanup, or advanced AI-driven enhancement workflows.

 

Tool Primary Focus Denoise Approach Price Aiarty Image Enhancer AI-based enhancement Noise reduction + detail reconstruction Lifetime license (with free trial) Adobe Lightroom RAW workflow Sensor-level AI denoise Creative Cloud subscription only DaVinci Resolve Signal processing Temporal + spatial noise reduction Lifetime license (Studio version) Topaz Photo AI Intelligent Automation Denoise + sharpen pipeline Subscription DxO PureRAW Camera calibration Camera-profile-based denoise Lifetime license + upgrade fee ON1 NoNoise AI General-purpose AI Adjustable AI denoise for RAW/JPEG Lifetime/subscription

 

Tips: To get the best results, match the AI image denoiser to your editing habits. If you want to avoid the "subscription trap" and prioritize long-term value, Aiarty Image Enhancer currently offers a 49% off lifetime license ($79, originally $155), available for 3 machines (PC/Mac), includes free lifetime updates, and is backed by a 30-day money-back guarantee.

 

Adobe Lightroom

For those already within the Adobe ecosystem, Lightroom offers a seamless experience by integrating its AI Denoise tool directly into the familiar Detail panel. The workflow is impressively straightforward: a single slider adjustment generates a new, enhanced DNG file, allowing you to continue your RAW editing without interruption.

Under the hood, Lightroom performs sophisticated RAW-level processing that balances image noise reduction with color and tonal consistency. The results are highly predictable and professional, prioritizing a stable, clean output over aggressive texture reconstruction.

 

 

DaVinci Resolve (UltraNR / Neural Noise Reduction)

If you already use DaVinci Resolve for video, you’ll be pleased to know its new Photo Page brings that same Hollywood-grade photo denoising to your still images. It’s a fantastic "two-for-one" tool that lets you clean up noisy photos using the UltraNR engine without ever leaving your project timeline.

Rather than trying to "invent" new textures, the DaVinci Neural Engine focuses on high-end signal cleanup. It uses a mix of spatial and temporal analysis to remove noise from photos, effectively scrubbing away that gritty luminance and "rainbow" chroma noise while keeping edges like hair and eyes sharp. It’s particularly impressive in deep shadows or underexposed night shots, providing a clean, cinematic look that feels like a natural photograph rather than a digital reconstruction.

 

 

Topaz Photo 

Built around an all-in-one enhancement pipeline, Topaz Photo applies AI models to denoise, sharpen, and upscale images with minimal manual adjustment, focusing on fast automated results. The idea is straightforward: load a noisy image, let the model decide, and get a clean result quickly. Different AI models handle RAW and non-RAW images separately.

When applied to real images, it removes noise from images and produces clean results with minimal manual input. Because AI image denoising and sharpening are handled together, the final appearance can vary depending on how each model balances smoothing and detail enhancement.

 

 

DxO PureRAW

DxO PureRAW takes a RAW-first approach to image enhancement, combining camera and lens profiling with AI-based processing tailored to specific sensor characteristics. Within this workflow, DxO relies on DeepPRIME models to denoise images. Using camera and lens profiles together with AI-based processing, they handle image noise reduction, demosaicing, and optical corrections in a unified step. Newer versions like DeepPRIME 3 and XD3 further improve noise suppression and detail recovery in high-ISO images.

This calibration-heavy workflow delivers exceptionally clean RAW files with superior noise suppression, providing a purer "digital negative" that is particularly effective for high-ISO images shot in difficult lighting.

 

 

ON1 NoNoise AI

Available as both a standalone tool and plugin, ON1 NoNoise AI applies AI-driven noise reduction to RAW and JPEG files while offering adjustable control over detail preservation and smoothing intensity.

The tool uses AI-based noise reduction to clean up high-ISO and low-light images while attempting to preserve fine detail and sharpness, with adjustable intensity levels that allow users to control how aggressively noise is removed. While it prioritizes a balanced, natural look for everyday photography rather than deep texture reconstruction, it remains a popular AI denoiser for its ability to preserve color fidelity in challenging low-light shots.

 

 

Conclusion 

AI has transformed noise reduction from a tedious chore into a professional-grade shortcut. While tools like Lightroom and DxO focus on RAW consistency, and others lean toward automation, Aiarty Image Enhancer stands out for its superior balance of noise removal and genuine texture preservation.

For photographers who need powerful, easy-to-use image noise reduction that restores natural detail without complex manual steps, Aiarty is a top-tier choice. It offers the precision and speed required to turn noisy, low-light shots into clean, professional results with just a single click.

Categories: Photography News

Why Fujifilm Is the Only Major Manufacturer That Understands Gen Z

FStoppers - Sat 9 May 2026 5:03pm

The Fujifilm X100VI has been supply-constrained for more than two years. The camera launched in February 2024, and as of April 2026, availability remains spotty: Fujifilm's own US shop typically shows it as "Notify Me" rather than in stock, and major retailers list the camera as temporarily out of stock with rolling expected availability windows rather than steady inventory. The company raised the US price from $1,599 to $1,799, and the camera still moves for above MSRP on the secondary market. Two years of reported shortages is not a production problem that got solved.

[Read More]

Categories: Photography News

The Best Camera for Fujifilm X100VI Fans Who Want Interchangeable Lenses

FStoppers - Sat 9 May 2026 1:03pm

The Fujifilm X-E5 sits in an interesting spot in the Fujifilm lineup: it has the same 40-megapixel sensor as the Fujifilm X-T5 but in a body closer in size to the X100 series, with interchangeable lenses. After a year of daily use, including replacing the X-T5 as his main body, Mitch Lally has a clear picture of exactly who this camera is for and where it falls short. 

[Read More]

Categories: Photography News

Depth Range Masking in Camera Raw: Adobe's Most Useful New Photoshop Feature

FStoppers - Sat 9 May 2026 11:03am

Adobe quietly added a depth map masking feature to Camera Raw in a recent Photoshop update, which lets you isolate specific depth layers in a photo. Unlike subject or background masks, this one lets you target a slice of depth in a scene, from foreground rocks to a hazy midground to a distant sky. 

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Categories: Photography News

The Cheapest Way to Shoot Digital Leica M-Mount in 2026

FStoppers - Sat 9 May 2026 9:03am

Leica and affordable rarely share the same conversation, but the Leica M240 might be the exception worth paying attention to. It's a full frame, M-mount digital rangefinder that costs a fraction of what modern Leica bodies go for, and it still delivers the core experience that makes these cameras worth owning. 

[Read More]

Categories: Photography News

How To Capture Mood In Your Photos With The Help Of Amazing Skies

 

What Is Mood?

Mood essentially relates to the lighting in a shot. Giving something mood usually means we are trying to make it dark and brooding – making it moody. But mood can relate to any lighting situation, to give your photo any mood/feeling.

For landscape photography, mood usually relates to the weather. A cloudy, unsettled day will create mood in a way most of us expect it to be - dark and brooding. Although the opposite, where streaks of the sun break through the cloud to shine light on parts of the green landscape is equally as good, it's just the mood/feeling is different. 

 

Gear Choices

To take good moody landscapes, you're going to need a tripod as dark days may be good for the style of shot you're trying to create but the lack of light can lead to slower shutter speeds and working without a tripod can result in shake. 

 

 

Be Patient

This type of photography requires patience. To get the best shots, you need to wait until there is a break in the weather to get some really interesting lighting effects from the turbulent sky. Of course, mood doesn't have to be cloudy, but with landscapes, it's more of a challenge to portray mood on bright, sunny, cloudless days. 

When the right light does arrive, work quickly as it can be gone again before you know it. The key to this is always to be ready, having your gear out and framing in-mind before the right light does show its face. 
 

Be Prepared

Check the weather forecast the night before as there's no point heading out if you find the weather isn't going to be right. You also need to have the right type of location as you'll find some subjects will work better in dark, moody shots than others. 

 

 

Convert Your Shots

Black and white is another way to create mood in your photography. Taking photos of a gnarly tree, for example, in black and white will look so much more foreboding than a shot in colour. You can shoot black and white in-camera although, if you shoot in colour, you can convert your shots to black and white in your chosen editing software, giving you more control over the tones, highlights and shadows in the shot.

 

You've read the technique now share your related photos for the chance to win prizes: Daily Forum Competition

Categories: Photography News

Freewell Launches a Very Slim Variable ND/CPL Filter Kit

FStoppers - Sat 9 May 2026 5:04am

My first impression when pulling Freewell's latest filter kit offering out of its packaging was how small and light it was. Filter kits tend to be bulky and take up lots of space, often housed in boxes that take up valuable space in camera bags too. They can be a nuisance to lug around. Not this kit. I immediately liked it. 

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Categories: Photography News

The Viltrox 15mm f/1.7 on Fujifilm: Can a $239 Lens Handle a 40-Megapixel Sensor?

FStoppers - Sat 9 May 2026 4:30am

Choosing a wide angle prime for a Fujifilm X mount body gets complicated fast, especially once you start weighing image quality against price. The Viltrox 15mm f/1.7 sits at $239, which isn't rock-bottom, but it's close enough to make you wonder whether it can actually hold up. 

[Read More]

Categories: Photography News

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