The Gear a Beginner Needs to Shoot Landscapes (and What to Skip)

Landscape photography has a reputation as a gear-hungry genre, and it is easy to believe you need a closet full of equipment before you can shoot a decent mountain. You do not. The genre actually rewards a small, deliberate kit more than almost any other, because you are usually on a tripod, working slowly, with time to think. This guide walks through the categories that matter, points you toward solid current options in each, and is honest about what you can skip.

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Submit Your Best Long Exposure Shots

Welcome to the June Critique the Community!  For this contest/critique, we are doing another abstract theme that should allow more photographers to enter. For this month we want to see your best photograph that feature "Motion Blur".

Lightroom Classic 15.4 Adds a Duplicate Finder and Smarter Group Culling

Lightroom Classic 15.4 shipped with a duplicate finder, improved AI masking, and smarter culling tools, and at least a few of these updates will change how you manage and edit images day to day. If your library has grown to tens of thousands of files, one of these features alone is worth knowing about.

Sony's Most Beloved 55mm Gets a Serious Challenge From Viltrox

Choosing between a $370 lens and a $1,100 lens is easy when the cheaper one wins on almost every technical measure. The Viltrox AF 55mm f/1.8 Evo is a direct challenge to the Sony Zeiss 55mm f/1.8 ZA, and Dustin Abbott's side-by-side test on the Sony a7R VI makes that case in detail.

Why Most Landscape Photographers Are Ignoring Half Their Best Shots

Landscape photography has a bias problem. The vast majority of images flooding social media and print focus on sunsets, northern lights, and those much-visited "honeypot" locations where tripod holes wear into the ground from overuse, while whole categories of equally compelling scenes get ignored entirely.

Portrait Photography for Beginners: Settings, Lenses, and Posing Basics

The fastest way to make better portraits is not to buy a flash, a softbox, and three light stands. It is to learn to see and shape the light you already have. Natural light is free, it is forgiving once you understand it, and it teaches you the fundamentals that every lighting setup later builds on. This guide covers the gear, the camera settings, and the posing and light-shaping basics that get a beginner from snapshots to real portraits, all without a single strobe.

Leica Was Never Really About Cameras

Before anything else gets misread, I want to make one thing clear.

Years ago, Leica Camera AG hired me for an assignment worth roughly $10,000: the photos in this article are from that assignment that made the Leica X catalog in 2013. Today I have no working relationship with them, and I don't own any Leica cameras. I currently shoot Canon. I mention this only because Leica discussions tend to turn strangely ideological online, as if any nuance automatically comes from sponsorship or resentment. It doesn't. Sometimes it just comes from having been close enough to see how the myth behaves from the inside.

Six Ways to Make Any Camera More Fun to Shoot With

Choosing a camera is rarely just about specs. A camera can cost over $6,000, autofocus everything in front of it, shoot at 30 frames per second with pre-capture, and still leave you feeling completely disconnected from your own images.

Shooting Street Photography in Heavy Rain

Shooting street photography in the rain sounds miserable until you see what it actually produces. Hong Kong in a full thunderstorm gives you reflections, umbrellas, chaotic traffic, and strangers too focused on staying dry to notice a camera in their face.

Hasselblad Files Now Open Natively in Capture One

For years, the workflow gap between Hasselblad and Capture One was one of those quietly frustrating facts of professional life. If you shot medium format on a Hasselblad but preferred to edit in Capture One, you were stuck converting your raw files first, and every conversion chipped away at the color fidelity and editing latitude that were the whole point of shooting Hasselblad in the first place. That gap is now closed.

A $35 Film Camera Went to Maui. Here's What Came Back.

Shooting a rocket launch at 1:30 a.m. from Morro Bay, photographing a trip to Maui with a $35 underwater film camera, and spending a week with a Lotus Emira press car on a dry lake bed: Willem Verbeeck packed a lot into the last couple of months, and this video covers all three projects. Each one involved a genuinely different approach to photography, and seeing how the results turned out across such different conditions is worth your time.

The Experience of Shooting Daily Life on Film

Shooting film and actually sitting down to review what you got are two very different experiences, and watching someone do it honestly, including the frames that didn't quite land, is one of the more useful things you can find on camera YouTube right now. 

Bracketing Explained: Exposure, Focus, and White Balance

Most photographers meet bracketing exactly once, in a tutorial about high dynamic range landscapes, and walk away thinking it means "shoot three exposures and merge them." That is one kind of bracketing. There may be two more sitting in your camera's menu right now, and most people never touch them.

Is Your Home Studio Lighting Making Your Videos Look Cheap?

Lighting a home studio well is harder than most people expect, and the gap between flat, lifeless footage and something that actually looks intentional usually comes down to a few decisions. Getting those decisions right early saves you from buying gear you don't need and reworking your setup from scratch later.

This 135mm f/1.8 Is the Sharpest Lens 7Artisans Has Ever Made, But With a Catch

The 135mm autofocus lens market has gotten crowded fast, with options from Samyang, Viltrox, and Sigma all competing for your attention on Sony E-mount, Nikon Z-mount, and L-mount. The 7Artisans 135mm f/1.8 enters that field with the lowest MSRP of the group at $689, but price alone isn't enough to stand out when the competition has had years to mature.

What Photographers Rarely Learn From Painting

Photographers have been learning from painting for decades, but only from one half of it. Light, composition, proportion, tonal control — everything that strengthens representation has been absorbed and taught. And that is where the study usually stops. The moment painting stopped depending on the subject, photography largely stopped following it.

15 Beginner Photography Mistakes (and the One-Line Fix for Each)

Every photographer makes these. The difference between someone who improves fast and someone who plateaus isn't talent; it's how quickly they stop repeating the same fifteen errors. None of these require new gear or more money to fix. Most take a single setting change or a shift in habit. 

Fstoppers Photographer of the Month (June 2026): Nina Lozej

The Fstoppers community is brimming with creative vision and talent. Every day, we comb through your work, looking for images to feature as the Photo of the Day or simply to admire your creativity and technical prowess. In 2026, we're featuring a new photographer every month, whose portfolio represents both stellar photographic achievement and a high level of involvement within the Fstoppers community.

The Art of Seeing: Finding Your Visual Voice

“What style do you shoot in?” or “I see a lot of [insert any photographer's name here] in your work.” These types of questions and statements, I'm sure, have been presented to you, and if you've ever wondered why, we can find out together.