Photography News

The 2024 finalists for Ocean Photographer of the Year 2024 have been announced.

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A second trailer for Lee has dropped with this one revealing more of the story and character of Lee Miller who is played by Kate Winslet.

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It's an exciting time to be a film photographer. After almost two decades without a major new film camera release, Pentax released the 17 earlier this year. Now, there's a chance we may be getting yet another film camera from another famed manufacturer... Lego.

The toy company has a program called Lego... more

Image: Lux

Hot on the heels of a summer filled with companies talking about using AI to improve the photography experience, the makers of the iPhone and iPad photography app Halide are promising something different. An update to the app has added what the company calls "Process Zero," a mode that uses "zero AI and zero computational photography."

The company pitches Process Zero... more

Analog photographer, self-taught camera repairman, and engineer Evan Dorsky purchased the new Pentax 17 half-frame film camera, and, like any enthusiastic repairman, he took it apart to see what makes it tick.

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This week, PetaPixel published a podcast where the entire premise was simply posing questions provided by photographers to Adobe. But just the act of publicizing those answers immediately turned some viewers off, showing a huge number need to see action, not words -- if anything at all will work at this point.

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The parent company of TikTok, ByteDance, has debuted a new text-to-video AI app, Jimeng AI, in China, paving the way for a future where TikTok features a bevy of AI-generated videos.

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SmallRig's new wireless follow focus system is an affordable way for dedicated focus pullers to work separately from camera operators.

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To capture one of the most incredible parts of Planet Earth III, cinematographer Luke Nelson spent 17 days living 700 feet underground in a cave in Vietnam.

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Over the past few weeks, we've compiled the questions you want Adobe to answer related to its push into AI, recent controversies, and the state of photography in general. We had a chance to sit down with Maria Yap, Adobe's Vice President of Digital Imaging, to give the company a chance to respond.

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