How To Improve Your Travel Photography Portraits Instantly
1. Ask Permission
If you're planning on working up close so a person is the main focus of your photo you should always ask them if it's OK to take their photograph. This is even more important if you plan on snapping a couple of shots of children playing as it can anger parents if you just start taking photographs of their kids. If language is a barrier try smiling and pointing to your camera you should soon have a quick nod or shake of the head in response. When people play a minor part in your image asking permission to shoot, particularly if it's a large crowd, can be impossible as there are just too many people. The same goes for shots of shows you may go and watch while on your holiday. Of course, if there are signs or information on your ticket which says you're not allowed to take photos then don't but otherwise, you should, generally, be OK to shoot without asking. Just remember these people will have dressed up for the stage so, for something more authentic, you need to get out onto the street.
2. Be Polite
Your job is to make your subject feel comfortable so always give them eye contact when you're talking to them, smile and don't forget your manners. Try to learn what hello, please and thank you are in the language of the country you're visiting and if your subject looks uncomfortable when you start taking photographs, it is usually just best to stop and move on to something else as some people will say yes just to be polite when really they'd prefer to hide from your lens. Using longer focal lengths will put more distance between you and them which means you can take a couple of photos without invading their personal space. Once you've got your shot(s) be polite and show your subject the results. Just be wary of some people who'll expect a tip for helping you out.
3. Understand Their Culture
Make sure you know what's acceptable and what isn't and respect the views/practices of the people you're visiting. Remember laws differ around the world too and there may be more restrictions on photography in the place you're visiting than in the UK so it's best to check before you start shooting.
4. Out With Tour Groups
If it's safe to do so, head out with one or two people instead of a large group as lots of people sticking a lens at you can be intimidating. If you're heading out on an organised trip, you can stay close to the group but don't crowd just one person. Instead, pick another subject then move back to the person who first caught your eye and politely ask if you can take a few photos after the rest of the group moves on to something else.
If the surroundings/background will give your shot context, as the above example does, use it. Make sure it's not overpowering though as attention still needs to fall on the person you picked for the portrait. If it's not really worth photographing or it's a little messy, use a wider aperture to throw it out of focus. Darker backgrounds will really help your shot 'pop', making your subject really stand out from the rest of the shot.
If you have a willing subject who tenses up and becomes a little too rigid when you put the camera to your eye take the shot anyway then quickly snap another when they think you've finished capturing a moment when they're more relaxed.
For more intimate shots, tighten your frame by either moving your position so you're working closer to your subject or use the longer focal lengths on your zoom lens to fill their frame with their face. The second method is often preferred as it means your subject stays relaxed as you're not invading their space. Just make sure you focus on the eyes and check everything is sharp before you hit the shutter button.
If your subject is selling, making or buying something try and take a few shots of them 'in action'. A candid approach is often the way to go for this which means you need to shoot lots and often. Setting your camera to continuous shooting mode will mean you can take a quick series of shots, increasing your chances of capturing an interesting expression/look. If you want to get closer to people but don't fancy aiming your lens at them try shooting from the hip. This approach can be a little hit and miss, but you can get the odd, surprisingly good result from trying it.
You've read the technique now share your related photos for the chance to win prizes: Daily Forum Competition
How AI Video Effects Are Helping Photographers Create More Engaging Visual Stories
AI video effects can help photographers turn ordinary images into more immersive visual stories. Instead of showing a single moment, they can create movement, emotion, and a stronger connection with viewers.
- Subtle camera zooms that make still photos feel more dynamic.
- Motion effects that bring landscapes and city scenes to life.
- Cinematic lighting adjustments for stronger visual impact.
- Animated transitions between images in a photo series.
- Atmospheric effects such as rain, snow, or glowing lights.
- Creative filters that match different storytelling styles.
For photographers who want an easy way to create these effects, AI Inspo offers a range of tools designed for visual content creation. It can help users add motion, cinematic elements, creative transitions, and visual enhancements that transform static images into engaging video content.
How AI Video Effects Enhance Visual Storytelling
AI effects allow photographers to present stories in ways that feel more vivid and memorable. Instead of simply displaying images, they can guide viewers through a visual journey. Let’s look at some real-life ways this helps photographers:
Case 1. Travel Photography
A photographer can turn a collection of travel photos into a short cinematic video. Smooth motion effects and transitions help viewers feel as if they are experiencing the destination rather than just looking at individual images.
Case 2. Portrait Photography
AI video effects can add subtle movement and lighting changes to portrait images. This creates a stronger emotional connection and helps communicate the subject's personality more effectively.
Case 3. Wedding Photography
Wedding photographers often capture hundreds of meaningful moments. AI-powered effects can transform selected photos into a story-driven highlight video that feels more engaging for couples and their families.
Case 4. Nature and Landscape Photography
A beautiful landscape image can become more immersive with animated skies, moving clouds, or gentle environmental effects. These additions help communicate the atmosphere and mood of the original scene.
5 Practical Ways for Photographers to Use AI Video Effects
AI video effects are not only creative tools but also practical solutions for modern content creation. They can help photographers expand the value of their work and reach wider audiences without spending hours on video editing.
Create Social Media Content from Existing Photos
Many photographers already have large photo libraries. AI video effects make it easy to turn these images into short videos suitable for Instagram Reels, TikTok, YouTube Shorts, and other social platforms.
Build More Engaging Client Presentations
Instead of delivering only static galleries, photographers can create video presentations that showcase key images with motion and visual effects, providing a more memorable viewing experience.
Enhance Portfolio Displays
Adding video versions of selected projects to a portfolio can help photographers stand out. Dynamic presentations often capture attention more effectively than still images alone.
Tell Complete Stories with Photo Series
When several images are connected by a theme or event, AI video effects can help organize them into a clear narrative with a beginning, middle, and end.
Repurpose Existing Content for Marketing
Photographers can use AI video effects to refresh older projects. A photo series from a previous shoot can become new promotional content without requiring another session.
To Sum Up
Photography continues to evolve as audience preferences change. While still images remain important, video content is becoming an essential part of visual communication. AI video effects provide photographers with a simple way to add motion, emotion, and creativity to their work.
Why a Decade-Old DSLR Keeps Winning Awards, and What That Should Teach You
Earlier in 2026, a 15-year-old named Jack Crockford won his category at the British Wildlife Photography Awards 2026 with a frozen instant of a Eurasian hobby snatching prey out of the air, a shot that demands timing most photographers spend years failing to develop. He did it with an aging professional DSLR and a long telephoto lens, not one of the artificial-intelligence-driven mirrorless bodies that dominate every camera advertisement this year. On its own, that is a charming footnote. The problem is that it is not on its own.
Five Older Cameras That Prove Great Photography Isn't About Technology
There's this idea going around that the newest cameras, with the latest sensor or faster processor, will give you the best image quality. I say that's just plain wrong.
Leica Announces the SL3-P
A new Leica camera always attracts attention. And while the M line is the brand's most famous line, there are many devotees of the SL system, which is a more contemporary system akin to cameras offered by Nikon, Canon, and Sony. Today, Leica announced the newest iteration, the SL3-P, a 44-megapixel camera designed for both speed and performance.
When the Street Becomes Too Open
There are moments when the street offers nothing back. No gesture, no alignment, no interruption — just space, air, a sky that refuses to hold anything except itself, a line cutting across almost by accident, a billboard drifting at the edge already dissolving into irrelevance.
Canon RF 20-50mm f/4L IS USM PZ Tested on Full Frame and APS-C
The Canon RF 20-50mm f/4L IS USM PZ is a lens built around a specific kind of shooter: someone who wants wide angle coverage, reliable stabilization, and smooth power zoom control, all in one relatively compact package. At $1,400, it sits in territory where performance has to justify the price tag.
How To Use Patterns & Repetition In Your Photography
A standard lens or something with a slightly more length can make isolating detail easier while a tripod will help you make sure everything is aligned and straight.
2. What Should I Look For?
Patterns are everywhere, you just have to look carefully at what you're photographing. You may find it a little difficult at first but once you've trained your eye, you'll see patterns all over. Try and search for single items that are repetitive such as a row of windows or a more random pattern such as apples in a basket.
Here are just a handful of places to look for patterns:
- Buildings – windows, doors, steps, columns, roof tiles, brickwork, whole buildings if you can find a good location to shoot from.
- Markets – gift shops, stalls selling fruit, veg etc.
- Beach – stones, patterns in the sand, pebbles, seaweed
- Sky – clouds, flocks of birds flying overhead
3. Where Should I Stand?
If possible, stand straight-on to the surface you're photographing and make sure the patterns straight. This will help turn distant shapes into the patterns you're looking for. If you can, get up high as you'll be able to photograph roof tiles then back on the ground take a look at what's under your feet as floor tiles and bricked pavements will create interesting patterns that are worth photographing. If you can't get straight on to your subject don't worry; shooting from a slight angle gives you the chance to use a little blur to guide the eye to a certain part of the image. You do this by adjusting the aperture, shooting wide open.
4. Crop In Where Possible
The key to a successful pattern shot is to make sure there's nothing around it that would distract the viewer away from it so move your feet to get close or use your zoom to fill the frame. If it's not possible to crop in camera you can always open your images up in the editing software you use and use the crop tool.
You've read the technique now share your related photos for the chance to win prizes: Daily Forum Competition
The Tamron 17-70mm f/2.8 Covers a Gap Most APS-C Shooters Don't Realize They Have
Finding a fast, versatile zoom for APS-C mirrorless that doesn't cost as much as a full frame body is genuinely difficult. The Tamron 17-70mm f/2.8 sits in a spot where very few lenses compete.
The Two-Camera Wedding Setup That Actually Works
Shooting a wedding with one camera is a gamble. One malfunction, one missed moment, and there's no recovering it. That's the core reason most working wedding photographers carry two camera bodies, but the backup argument is only part of the story.
Why This Photographer Uses Webcams Instead of Weather Apps
Fog doesn't wait. When it rolls in at dawn and burns off by mid-morning, the window for shooting is measured in minutes, and whether you get the shot comes down to what you did the night before.
5 Top Ideas To Improve Your Coastal Photography
It might seem strange to be out on the beach at night with your camera but you can get some interesting pictures so delay the visit to the pub for a little longer and do some night-time coastal photography once you have your sunsets in the bag.
1. When To ShootThe usual thinking for low light work is to shoot while there is still some colour in the sky and this helps avoid those stark black backgrounds. This is definitely good advice and helps you avoid pictures with too much light pollution, which comes out a yucky yellow and can look horrible. But after you've got your sunset shots, stay out after the twilight hour and continue shooting to even later.
You can try this photography at any time of the year, however you may prefer to wait until later in the year when the sunset isn't as late so you don't have to stay out for as long or late.
2. What To Shoot
As the sun sets, try shooting silhouettes or if the sky is particularly impressive, make this your focus. Later on, what you shoot is dependent on where you are. If you are at a traditional seaside resort with some nightlife there may be a pier and amusements that are worth shooting. On night's that are clear and the moon is full, try shooting some seascapes decorated in moonlight.
The colours you get with different artificial lamps can vary, and you can get orange or green colour casts depending on the light type. Leave the camera in auto white balance and see how it copes with the light source. If you do not like the look of the results, try setting the colour temperature manually. To be honest, though, do not worry too much about weird colour casts because they can embellish the moodiness of the scene.
4. Flashguns
You could introduce your own light to close-by subjects thanks to flashguns. The flashgun on the camera hot-shoe will work fine for many scenes but beware of glare off glossy surfaces.
5. Longer Exposures
Another way is to have the camera on the tripod, open the shutter on a long exposure setting of a few seconds or use the Bulb setting with a remote release to keep the shutter open while you fire the flash several times to light up foreground features. If you're working on the sand do make sure your tripod is balanced and secure. This painting with light technique is fun and will need several attempts to perfect so don't expect to get it right straight away. When trying this technique, do not stand between the subject and the camera and fire the flash because your ghostly image will show.
You've read the technique now share your related photos for the chance to win prizes: Daily Forum Competition
Harlowe Introduces a Stunning New Travel Tripod, and It’s Really Light!
Harlowe has just launched the Rocket Air, a brand-new tripod that is bundled with a fluid head, providing a wonderfully light solution for hybrid shooters. The fluid head has a leveling adjustment, so for me, this makes it the perfect travel tripod for photography. If I want to shoot some video too, the fluid head has very good dampening to absorb external vibrations and resist rapid, jerky movements.
We Review Thypoch’s Ksana 21mm F/3.5 Asph: A Modern Interpretation of a Vintage Coating
Thypoch has been slowly making a name for itself in the industry and is no stranger today to creating modern manual lenses that pay homage to classic lenses—starting with the Simera, Eureka, and now the Ksana. The 21mm f/3.5 Asph is Thypoch's first entry in the new "Ksana" series, designed to be an ultra-light and compact everyday lens with vintage rendering. If you must know, the name Ksana comes from the Sanskrit word Kṣaṇa (क्षण /ˈksɑːnə/), representing the eastern concept of the "instant" or the duration of a sudden enlightenment.
ePHOTOzine Daily Theme Winners Week 3 June 2026
[COMMENT_IMG]direct|36043|36043_1781950734.jpg[/COMMENT_IMG]
The latest winner of our popular daily photography theme which takes place in our forums have been chosen and congratulations go to Leon88 (Day 20 - 'Dog').
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 16Summer Show
[COMMENT_IMG]portfolio|189602|3744847[/COMMENT_IMG]
Day 17
Castles
[COMMENT_IMG]portfolio|271877|3923813[/COMMENT_IMG]
Day 18
Close-Up Portraits
[COMMENT_IMG]portfolio|274663|3601990[/COMMENT_IMG]
Day 19
Puddles
[COMMENT_IMG]portfolio|115557|3904239[/COMMENT_IMG]
Day 21Family Vacation
[COMMENT_IMG]portfolio|70323|3920159[/COMMENT_IMG]
Day 22
Statues & Sculptures
[COMMENT_IMG]direct|161002|161002_1782134193.jpg[/COMMENT_IMG]
Day 23
Plane
[COMMENT_IMG]portfolio|324638|3933595[/COMMENT_IMG]
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.
Dogma 11 in Photography: A Set of Rules or a Necessary Constraint?
In photography, there's always a tension between control and immediacy. On one side, you have post-production, refinement, and the ability to shape an image long after it's been captured. On the other, there's the raw act of photographing in real time, where decisions are irreversible.
"Dogma 11" sits firmly in the second camp.
The Rise and Fall of GoPro: How the Company That Defined the Action Camera Ran Out of Road
On June 1, 2026, GoPro filed a document with the Securities and Exchange Commission that no company ever wants to file. Its auditor, PricewaterhouseCoopers, had attached a going-concern warning to GoPro's 2025 accounts, the formal accounting language for substantial doubt that a business can survive the next twelve months.
Raw vs. JPEG at the Grand Canyon: What Four Cameras Actually Showed
Choosing between raw and JPEG isn't just a technical preference; it directly affects how much you can recover and reshape an image in post. This helpful video tests this in a setting where the stakes are real: a Grand Canyon sunset, shot across four current-generation camera bodies.
Lightroom's Masking Tools Are More Powerful Than You Think: Here's How to Use Them
Lightroom's masking tools are the single biggest gap between a flat edit and one that looks professionally dialed in. Most people skip them entirely, and their edits suffer for it.
Canon PowerShot V1 Review: Is This the Best Small Camera for Video in 2026?
Buying a compact camera when you already own a full frame setup sounds like a step backward. The Canon PowerShot V1 makes a surprisingly strong case that it isn't.
