Fujifilm X100VI Review: Worth the 18-Month Wait?
The Fujifilm X100VI has been one of the most talked-about compact cameras in years, partly because it took so long to get into people’s hands. If you’ve been holding out for one, the real question isn’t about hype, it’s about whether the changes actually affect how you shoot.
10 Wedding Photography Mistakes That Can Ruin a First Job
Shooting a first wedding carries real weight. You get one day, no redo, and a long list of moments that will not wait while you figure things out.
A Simple Photography Strategy That Starts at the Next Corner
You don’t need a detailed plan to come home with strong images. Rick Bebbington proves that during a three-hour walk through Punta Arenas, Chile, where he ignores the obvious shots and trusts instinct instead.
12 Top Portrait Photography Tutorials For You To Try Today
It doesn't matter if you're planning an indoor or outdoor shoot, will be working with a professional model or your children, we have to tutorials that cover all aspects of portrait photography so you'll be ready to click the shutter button as soon as your subject arrives.
1. Urban Portrait Shoot Photography Tips
City streets are an abundance of jewelled lights from traffic, shops, and festive bulbs. Their colour and a good bit of sky detail make city locations perfect for urban winter shoots. Dramatic clouds or the subtle gradation of twilight hues make good backgrounds for winter lights but as the light fades and your background turns black, you can turn your attention to the Bokeh effect to really make your urban work shine.
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2. Tips On Using Fill-In Flash For Portraits
Fill-in flash can give images that extra bit of 'pop' they need when working both inside and out. Adding a little flash can flatter your model's skin, remove deep shadows that can appear in places on the face such as under the nose and it will give your model catchlights in their eyes which is a big bonus. It's also useful on overcast days as it can breathe life into dull portraits. You can also use a 'pop' of flash to highlight foreground interest in landscape shots.
3. Natural Light Portrait Tips For Beginners
Get back to basics and make the most of natural light by capturing portraits without flash or studio lights. Cloudy days are perfect for portraits as the light's diffused, use a reflector, clean your windows and make sure the eyes are sharp.
4. Winter Portrait Photography Tips
Living in the UK, most of the best clothing in our wardrobes is probably winter stuff so why not encourage people to get out and about with their favourite coats, hats and scarves and have fun shooting some outdoor winter portraits.
5. Photographing Low Light Portraits
Working with just one light, or indeed natural light at dusk, is a great way to create moody portraits that can be full of character. It's a perfect technique for shooting subjects who are a little older as low light can really exaggerate lines and wrinkles but don't let this put you off photographing low light portraits of younger members of your family.
6. Creative Children Portraits On A Budget
Just because you don't have an expensive lighting set-up or a studio doesn't mean you can't shoot interesting portraits of your children. To help you out, we've put together a list of quick tips made up of low-cost techniques.
7. Fun Portrait Photography Tips
Have a little fun on your next photoshoot and capture some expressions that'll put a smile on your face. Taking fun portrait photos doesn't have to be difficult - with a few simple tips, you can create something that breaks the mould.
8. Shoot Better Environmental Portraits With These Tips
Environmental portrait photography has nothing to do with global warming or looking after the planet. It is all about photographing your subject in their natural environment. This can be anywhere from where they work, where they live, or anywhere where they like to spend their time. It is all about portraying something of the character of your subject through where they are in the photo.
9. How To Create Catchlights In Your Portrait Shots
A catchlight is simply a light's highlight reflected off the surface of your subject's eyes. They subtly breathe light into portraits by adding a little more depth to the eyes and are something that painters were using in portraits long before photography was a popular pastime.
10. Improve Your Close-Up Portraits With Our 6 Tips
Our faces may be made up of the same components but the expressions, shapes, lines, tones and marks that decorate them all tell a unique story that's waiting to be photographed.
11. Portrait Photography Tips For Shoots Outside
Outdoor portraits add levels of interest to a shot you can't always get from an indoor shoot and it's also the perfect excuse to wrap up in layers (on cold days) and strike a pose. To kick-start your outdoor photoshoot, we've put a few easy to understand but rather essential outdoor portrait tips together for you to peruse.
12. Indoor Portraits With Window Light
Daylight is free and it is wonderful for portrait work as not only is it flattering and photogenic but it's really easy to work with so it's a good place for beginners to start. You don't need a fancy studio, either, as you can pick a location outdoors or simply set-up next to a window in your own home.
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10 Things Every Beginner Photographer Should Know
There is a particular kind of frustration that comes in the early months of learning photography. You see images online that move you, you understand on some intuitive level what makes them work, and then you pick up your camera and the results look nothing like what you had in your head. The gap between your taste and your ability feels enormous, and the sheer volume of technical information available online makes it worse rather than better.
I Found The Best 50mm Lens For L-Mount Cameras
I just tested a 50mm lens that cost $7000. I got to compare it directly to five other 50mm lenses starting at just $225. How do you think it stacked up?
To get the full story, please watch the video above, but I'll give you a quick summary of how each lens performed.
4 Top Tips To Perfect Your Architectural Photography: Capturing Architectural Detail That's Out Of Reach
Instead of focusing on a building as a whole, you can pick out detail such as clock faces, windows, gargoyles and other interesting aspects. However, doing so can be a bit tricky as unless you have an incredibly tall set of ladders, a lot can be out of reach but there are quite a few ways you can get around this.
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1. What's In Your Kit Bag?To get close to detail that's high-up on buildings, you're going to need a zoom lens that has a slightly longer reach. If you're a compact user you'll still be able to capture frame-filling shots if your camera features a longer zoom (20x or above would be good). Having a camera with a vari-angle LCD screen can make it easier to frame your shot when working with a tripod at its maximum height or when you're working hand-held with your arms up above you but it's not an essential feature.
Most pictures you see of churches, cathedrals and other tall structures show the whole, impressive structure but by cropping in tightly you can highlight the fantastic repetitive detail, make an interesting pattern and shoot detail you don't always notice in the wider shots.
Once you begin to search you'll be surprised at the amount of detail you'll be able to fill your frame with. Of course, there's gargoyles, clocks, windows, spires, sundials and weather vanes, but a little closer to the ground you'll find stone carvings present and sometimes intricate detailed wood carvings on the exterior walls around doorways and above windows.
Filling the frame with repeating patterns such as brickwork or tiles on a roof can create interesting abstract shots. Just fill your frame, watch your shutter speeds if you're working hand-held and make sure you're focusing accurately as blur really doesn't work in this type of shot.
3. Roof Access?
If you can get on the roof or balcony, as well as gaining you a great viewpoint of the city you can often find interesting statues/gargoyles projecting out from the walls. As they don't move they're an easy target and most are so beautifully sculptured that several varied photographs can be taken. However, as not all buildings give you access to their roof, you'll probably end up shooting from the ground where you'll need to use the long reach of your telephoto or zoom lens to bring the detail to you.
4. Magnification
The problem you have with using lenses with a longer reach is that they magnify objects, which is of course what you want, but this does mean that even the tiniest of movements can create a large amount of blur in your photograph so make sure you have a tripod and stick to quicker shutter speeds when possible. Using a lens which features Vibration Reduction (VR) will further minimise shake. If you're shooting detail such as weather vanes where the sky will be your background fit a polarizer to darken a blue sky and give more contrast to the shot.
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What Is Photography Actually For?
What is photography even about? What’s the goal? Billions of photos are made every day, shared instantly, and forgotten just as fast. When I first picked up a camera, I struggled to understand where my photos fit into all of that and whether making them mattered at all.
When I started photography, I felt like it needed a clear objective—some kind of outcome I could point to. I wanted to know what I was working toward, because without that, it felt like I was just producing images without any real direction.
Why the 24-70mm Lens Might Be the Most Honest Tool in Your Bag
The 24-70mm lens sits in an awkward place. It is not dramatic like a 16mm and it is not selective like a 200mm, yet many strong outdoor images live right in that middle ground.
Can You Build a Photo Book Without Golden Hour Light?
James Popsys has set a six-month deadline to create a new body of work in North Wales without shooting a single golden hour image. That constraint forces a hard look at how and why you shoot, especially when the landscape is close to home.
Four Audio Upgrades That Instantly Improve Your Videos
Good video falls apart fast when the audio is weak. Clean, controlled sound changes how your work feels, even if the visuals stay the same.
A Better Way to Bulk Denoise in Lightroom Classic
Lightroom Classic has more than one way to bulk denoise images, and the method you choose affects quality. When ISO varies across a shoot, a faster shortcut can quietly cost detail.
5 Top Park Photography Tips
Local parks are one of the best places to find a wide variety of photographic subjects. Plus, you'll be enjoying the outdoors and getting some exercise at the same time so what's not to like?
If you're just going for a quick walk around the park pocketing a compact will be fine but for those who will be taking their camera and interchangeable lenses along, pack your telephoto lens for shots of dog walkers, animals and long shots of the park with your town in the background. For close up work with flowers and leaves pocket your macro lens.
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An overcast day, when the light is gently diffused, is the perfect time to capture flowers and foliage. They look even better after a light rain shower as the vibrant greens will jump right out of your frame. If you spot a squirrel while looking through the trees and bushes keep your distance and use a telephoto lens to fill the frame with the cute animal. For those of you who have streams, ponds or even lakes in the park you're visiting why not have a go at duck/swan photography. In most locations, the ducks are used to people so getting close to them shouldn't be a problem.
If it's a fine day there should be plenty of people for you to snap a few candids of as they pass by. Try shooting from the hip or if someone such as a park warden tidying up really catches your eye, remember to ask them if they mind you taking their photo before you snap away.
Paths and lines of flowerbeds can be used to guide the eye through the image while repetitive patterns such as lines of trees, street lighting and fencing can add symmetrical interest to your shots.
If your park has wooded areas you could have a go at capturing beams of light bursting through the trees but this usually means you'll need an early start and shooting on a misty morning is a must.
Don't forget that statues, monuments and water features make great photographic subjects and most parks will have one if not all of these on display somewhere. Try looking for glimpses of buildings in your town through the leaves on the trees or gaps in the hedges. The contrast of green or even the golden colours of Autumn later on in the year against the glass and concrete of the town can work extremely well. Then, when you leave the park, find a hill to climb and photograph the patchwork of greens that break up the grey lines of the town.
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Neurapix Revolutionizes the Principle of AI Image Editing
The German image editing provider Neurapix has expanded its AI technology with a fundamental enhancement: effective immediately, the AI edits even more like a human by taking the context of the entire Lightroom collection being processed into account. The result: even more consistently edited photos.
The goal of many photographers is a cohesive look that runs throughout an entire shoot. Until now, however, editing AIs have analyzed each image individually and applied the desired style to each one separately. Neurapix's new approach also considers the other images within the project, ensuring, for example, even more consistent white balance and more uniform exposure across the entire set.
For users, almost nothing changes in terms of operation: in the Neurapix editing dialog, they can simply check the box labeled "Optimize Consistency" to activate the new AI. The feature is included in the "Neurapix Unlimited" plan. In the “Pay-per-Picture” model, as with all optional features, a maximum surcharge of 1 cent per image applies.
"The Best Editing Results Currently Possible"
"We asked ourselves: Why doesn't AI work like a human? After all, a human would look at the entire shoot and compare the images with one another," says Nils Sauder, co-founder and CEO of Neurapix. "Accordingly, we developed a completely new AI approach in order to deliver the best editing results currently possible to our customers."
The new feature becomes available automatically after updating the Neurapix plugin. The update is offered via a pop-up the next time Lightroom Classic is launched, or it can be installed manually via the Plug-in Manager.
About: Neurapix is a German AI start-up based in Goettingen that was founded in 2021. The company has developed an artificial intelligence that is able to learn a photographer's image editing style and apply it within Adobe Lightroom Classic. This allows photographers to have large numbers of photos edited in their own style, resulting in significant time savings of around 90%. For more information, please visit the Neurapix website.
Behind the Scenes With the New Laowa 15-35mm Periscope Probe Lens
Laowa's new probe zoom lenses are finally here, and they might be some of the strangest lenses ever made. For the last two months, I've been shooting with the most unusual of the bunch—the 15-35mm T12 Periscope Lens—and the shots it produces are unlike anything I've ever captured before. Let's dive in and see what makes this lens so unique.
Why Your Technically Perfect Landscape Photos Still Feel Empty
Photography is currently undergoing a crisis of distinctiveness. Landscape photography, in particular, falls victim to mediocrity: a convergence toward a homogenized aesthetic. In today’s world, where algorithms reward consistency over unique culture, the cookie-cutter approach to landscape photography has become a currency rather than an art form.
Canon Secures 32nd Consecutive Win at 2026 iF Design Awards
Canon has received eight accolades at the 2026 iF Design Awards, marking thirty-two years of consecutive recognition for the company's industrial design. This year's awards were granted to a range of products within Canon's portfolio, including mirrorless cameras, digital cinema equipment, and industrial printing solutions. These honors reflect the brand's ongoing participation in global design standards and its ability to deliver products across multiple technology sectors.
From Canon:
Canon announces that eight Canon Group product designs were recognised by iF International Forum Design GmbH at the iF Design Award 2026. This year marks the 32nd consecutive year in which Canon designs have won iF Design Awards. Canon Medical Systems Corporation's Aquilion Rise CT scanner was selected for an iF Gold Award, the highest distinction.
iF Design Award 2026 Gold winning productProduct name Full-body CT scanner Aquilion Rise (Canon Medical Corporation)
iF Design Award 2026 winning products
Product name Mirrorless camera EOS R50 V Compact digital camera PowerShot V1 3D lens RF-S7.8mm F4 STM DUAL Digital cinema camera EOS C400 Digital cinema camera EOS C50 Industrial inkjet label press LabelStream LS2000 Large-format hybrid printe
Colorado XL-series
(Canon Production Printing Netherlands B.V.)
iF Design Award 2026 Gold winning product
Aquilion Rise, full-body CT scanner
iF Design Award 2026 winning products
RF-S7.8mm F4 STM DUAL, 3D lens
PowerShot V1, compact digital camera
EOS R50 V, mirrorless camera (shown with RF-S14-30mm F4-6.3 IS STM PZ lens attached)
EOS C400, digital cinema camera (shown with CN-R85mm T1.3 L F lens attached)
EOS C50, digital cinema camera (shown with RF85mm F1.4 L VCM lens attached)
Colorado XL-series, large-format hybrid printer
LabelStream LS2000, industrial inkjet label press
About the iF Design Award
Established in 1953, the iF Design Award is one of the most prestigious design awards in the world. It recognizes outstanding industrial designs worldwide. This year, international design experts judged over 10,000 entries from 68 countries and regions across nine disciplines: product, packaging, branding & communication, service design, architecture, interior design, concept, user experience, and user interface.
For more information, please visit the Canon UK website.
3 Quick Candid Family Photography Tips
For environmental portraits, a 14-24mm lens can work well but a go-to lens popular with many photographers is a 70-200mm, which can produce great perspective at the right focal length. When working with families, particularly when shooting a little more candidly, natural light works well but do pack essential lighting accessories such as a reflector. If you find you're out during the middle part of the day, particularly on a sunny day, find shade you can shoot in to produce a more even exposure.
Even if you know the people you are photographing it's still important to talk to them during the shoot as direction and encouragement will always be welcomed. Suggest poses and always get your 'money shots' in the bag early so you can have more fun and also shoot more candidly later on. Good shots to ensure you capture are images of the group as well as shots with tighter framing of individuals or one or two family members together.
Direction doesn't have to come via your voice either. You could kick a ball into a particularly good patch of light or ask children to play with toys in a certain part of the landscape you're working in. Remember that children do have a short attention span so make the posing part of the shoot as quick as possible then leave them to play, capturing candids with your camera as they do.
Backgrounds that contrast with what your subject is wearing can create vibrant images and don't get too hung up on having everyone in matching shades as a mix of colours adds interest and if they pick their own outfits, they'll be more comfortable.
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10 Locations in Japan Every Landscape Photographer Should Visit
Japan is one of those countries that rewards photographers at every turn, but that very abundance can make planning overwhelming. With limited time, where do you actually go?
The Hidden Histogram Trick in Photoshop You’re Not Using
Contrast and clarity can turn a flat image into something that actually holds attention. Used without control, they can just as easily make a photo look harsh and overprocessed.
