Recent Posts
Chasing Separation: From a Simple Lens Question to a Shift in Perspective
A pretty straightforward gear question turned into something more layered than expected. The setup was already solid: a Canon EF 85mm f/1.8 USM paired with both the Canon EOS R100 and the Canon EOS R8. The idea was to push subject separation further—get that stronger background blur, that cleaner isolation—by adding a 7Artisans 75mm f/1.4 Lens (Canon RF).
On paper, it made sense. Faster aperture, slightly different focal length, native RF mount.
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Fujifilm X-H2S Review: The APS-C Camera That Stopped Making Excuses
There’s a particular kind of camera that gets recommended to serious photographers who aren’t ready to commit to full-frame — the consolation prize wrapped in enough specs to feel like a choice rather than a compromise. The Fujifilm X-H2S is not that camera. It is, without qualification, a serious tool for serious work.
What It Is The X-H2S sits at the top of Fujifilm’s X-series lineup — the larger, heavier, more capable sibling to the X-T5.
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Should You Buy the 7Artisans 75mm f/1.4 If You Already Own the Canon EF 85mm f/1.8 USM?
Honestly, the case for buying it is weak — here’s the breakdown.
Where the 7Artisans Has an Edge The lens does bring some genuine advantages. It’s a native RF mount, which means no adapter and a cleaner setup on any RF body. At f/1.4 versus f/1.8, you’re picking up about ⅔ of a stop — which does matter for low-light work and adds a marginally different character to the bokeh. And the price is a fraction of Canon’s own glass.
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ShutterFest 2026 Returns to St. Louis, April 7–9
ShutterFest 2026 runs April 7–9 at the historic St. Louis Union Station Hotel — the annual gathering that has become the largest hands-on photography conference in the country. An optional SF+ day on April 10 extends the run for those who want deeper, smaller-group dives into advanced technique.
The format is deliberately unstructured. Attendees build their own schedule from a mix of hands-on shooting classes, live demonstrations, platform lectures, vendor floor time, and open photo walks — all housed within Union Station, which the conference takes over entirely (save the aquarium).
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Shooting Against the Sun
There’s a rule they teach early in photography classes, usually delivered with the confidence of someone who has never broken it: keep the sun at your back. The logic is clean. Light falls on your subject. Your subject is properly exposed. Everyone goes home happy. It’s the kind of advice that produces technically correct photographs — evenly lit, well-exposed, and almost entirely forgettable.
The image I made in Kraków’s Rynek Główny on a bright autumn afternoon broke that rule completely.
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Every Focus Motor Canon Currently Uses, Explained
Canon lenses don’t all focus the same way, and once you start noticing it, it’s hard to unsee. The difference isn’t just speed—it’s character. Some lenses snap into focus with authority, others glide, others feel almost damped, like there’s intention behind every millimeter of movement. Behind the acronyms on the barrel sit seven distinct motor technologies, each engineered around a different idea of what “good autofocus” actually means.
Ring-Type USM is where Canon built its reputation.
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Bokeh Geometry: A Background That Feels Creamy
Bokeh is often discussed as if it were a purely emotional quality, something photographers respond to instinctively rather than analytically. A background feels creamy, or nervous, or harsh, and that is that. But the visual character of out-of-focus rendering is deeply tied to engineering decisions, manufacturing tolerances, and the physical geometry of the lens itself. The shape and cleanliness of blurred highlights do not happen by accident. They are the consequence of how light passes through curved glass surfaces, how aberrations are corrected or allowed to remain, and how precisely those surfaces are produced.
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Lens Linear Motors: The Silent Powerhouse
Autofocus has changed so much in the last decade that older ways of judging lens performance can feel oddly outdated. It used to be enough for a lens to acquire focus reasonably fast and land accurately most of the time. Today the demands are far higher. Modern cameras track eyes in motion, detect animals and vehicles, and fire long bursts while constantly recalculating focus between frames. In video, they perform smooth continuous transitions while the microphone sits only inches away, ready to expose every mechanical click and scrape.
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Lightroom Ecosystem: Mobile-to-Desktop Sync Secrets
One of the most useful promises of the modern Lightroom ecosystem is also one of the easiest to misunderstand. The idea sounds wonderfully simple: shoot on one device, begin editing on another, and finish anywhere. In practice, photographers often discover that cloud-based workflow is less magical than advertised. Albums do not update when expected. Flags appear on one device and vanish on another. A batch of edits seems frozen in transit.
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Sharp Lens: Decoding MTF
When photographers talk about a lens being “sharp,” they are usually compressing a surprisingly complex optical conversation into a single casual word. Sharpness is not one thing. It is a mix of contrast, fine-detail rendering, microcontrast, aberration control, field consistency, and how well a lens holds its performance from the center of the frame to the outer image circle. That is why lens engineers lean on Modulation Transfer Function, or MTF, charts.
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