Recent Posts
Shooting Air Shows: Getting the Shot When Aircraft Move Fast
Air show and aviation photography rewards patience more than gear, but the gear still has to keep up. Aircraft move fast, cross the frame at odd angles, and rarely give you a second attempt — so the difference between a keeper and a miss usually comes down to a handful of habits built before the plane even shows up.
Shutter speed is the first decision, not an afterthought. For a frozen prop disc with visible blade detail, something in the 1/500s to 1/1000s range usually works well.
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What We Can Learn From Observing Photographers
There’s a particular kind of education that happens when you stop taking pictures for a minute and just watch other photographers work. Not workshops, not YouTube tutorials — just standing on a riverside promenade at dusk, watching two strangers handle their gear, their light, and their moment in completely different ways.
That’s exactly the scene that prompted this post: two photographers on a bridge-side boardwalk during blue hour, cameras up, clearly working the same scene but approaching it from opposite instincts.
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Event Portraiture: How to Find and Shoot Candid Faces in a Crowd
Some of the strongest portraits at a trade show or conference are never posed. They happen in the half-second when someone glances toward the light, or pauses mid-thought while the crowd blurs past behind them. Event portraiture is really about being ready for that moment rather than manufacturing it.
Why Candid Beats Posed at Events Posed portraits at a booth or step-and-repeat tend to look interchangeable — same lighting, same smile, same backdrop.
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How and Why to Use a Gimbal for Photography and Video
A handheld gimbal has quietly become one of the most useful pieces of gear a working photographer or videographer can own. It doesn’t replace a tripod, and it doesn’t replace good glass — but it solves a problem neither of those can: keeping a shot smooth while you’re moving.
What a Gimbal Actually Does A gimbal uses motorized brushless motors on three axes (pitch, roll, and yaw) to counteract camera shake in real time.
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Spotted: Sony Mirrorless and a DJI RS 4 Mini at a Trade Show Floor
Not every gear sighting happens at a camera expo. This one turned up on an industrial trade show floor, wedged between adhesive tape displays and thermal solutions banners — a reminder that content creators show up wherever the story is, not just at photography-specific events.
The rig: a Sony a7-series body paired with a Sony FE 24-70mm f/2.8 GM II, mounted on a DJI RS 4 Mini. It’s a pairing DJI itself points to as a natural fit — the RS 4 Mini’s 2kg payload comfortably handles an a7 body with the 24-70mm GM II attached, without pushing the gimbal near its limits.
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Why Lens Repair Costs So Much
Crack open a modern zoom lens and the sticker shock on a repair quote starts to make sense. Inside the barrel: multiple optical groups suspended on helicoids, a geared focus or zoom-drive assembly, a small motor, and a nest of wiring running to electronic contacts. None of it is built to be casually taken apart, and that’s exactly the point.
The parts you never see The front element’s purple-green iridescence isn’t decorative — it’s multi-layer anti-reflective coating, applied in a vacuum deposition process to suppress flare and ghosting.
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Sony Confirms New RX10 Is Coming July 9, 2026
Sony has made it official. The Sony | Alpha account posted the announcement directly: a new RX10 is coming July 9, 2026, with the reveal set for 10:00 EDT / 15:00 BST / 23:00 JST. This is no longer a rumor — it closes out one of the longest gaps in Sony’s camera lineup. The RX10 IV shipped back in 2017, and the bridge camera segment has gone without a direct successor for nine years.
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Photo of the Day: A Café Conversation in Red and Teal
Some street frames work because of a decisive moment. This one works because of color.
The scene is a classic café terrace setup — narrow sidewalk, folding bistro chairs, a half-timbered building reflected in the window behind a glowing “Joyeux” sign. Nothing unusual is happening: two women are mid-conversation, one reaching for something on the table, the other leaning back with her arm draped over the chair, caught in the middle of a sentence.
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Canon EF 85mm f/1.8 on the R100 Via Adapter: A Cheaper Path to the 135mm Full-Frame Look
The 135mm f/2 has near-mythical status among event and reportage shooters: it compresses backgrounds, isolates a subject from a crowded room, and lets you work a few rows back without feeling like you’re in someone’s face. But at full-frame prices, it’s a hard lens to justify for a working shooter who doesn’t need it every day. There’s a cheaper way to get most of the way there — and it starts with a lens most people already own.
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Canon RF 100-400mm f/5.6-8 IS USM: The Budget Telephoto That Outperforms Its Price
Canon’s RF 100-400mm f/5.6-8 IS USM sells new for $749 and used for under $700. At that price, in a mount ecosystem where the equivalent L-series glass runs three to four times higher, the lens should not be this competent. It is.
The variable aperture is the tradeoff that makes everything else possible. f/5.6 at the wide end, sliding to f/8 by 400mm, is not a sports-photography aperture in the traditional sense — it will not isolate a subject against a blown background the way an f/2.
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