Photography News

Macbook Neo Vs $600 Windows Laptop

FStoppers - Fri 20 Mar 2026 6:31pm

After comparing the new MacBook Neo to Apple’s Air and Pro, a lot of people asked the obvious question: what about Windows?  

Yesterday I went to Walmart, bought a $659 Asus Vivobook, and tested it directly against the $600 MacBook Neo using the exact same real-world tasks.

Watch the video above to see the exact results of every test, but I'll summarize my findings below. 

MacBook Neo ($600)

Apple’s cheapest laptop continues to punch way above its price.

Pros

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Categories: Photography News

8 Top Reasons To Use A Tripod When Taking Photos

DIGITAL PHOTOGRAPHY NEWS FROM ePHOTOzine - Fri 20 Mar 2026 6:29pm
  Wondering what the point of using a tripod is when your arms do a great job of holding your camera? Here are our eight reasons why you should consider popping a tripod on your 'must-have' photography kit list. 

 

1. A Tripod Frees Your Hands

 

Using a tripod leaves you to have your hands free, making it easier to tweak and adjust your lens, camera settings and composition. You can also set the camera up and move away from its position which means you can capture shy animals or position your tripod where you may not want to stand such as in a pool of water that sits in front of a waterfall

 

2. Helpful For Panning

 

If you want to create a sense of speed when capturing action shots such as cars racing around a track or bikes speeding around a course you'll want your sharp subject to be sat against a blurred background. To do this you need to pan your camera, following the subject as they move through your frame and although you can do this hand-held, some photographers find it easier to use a tripod or monopod to help them capture the perfect pan. Monopods can move with the turn of your body while if you choose to use a tripod, a pan or ball head will make the task easier.

 

3. Create Different Angles

 

By using a tripod, you can get to new higher or lower angles that you wouldn't be able to reach as easily or comfortably if working hand-held. For example, macro and flower photography is easier if you have a tripod where the centre column can be moved from zero to 180-degree angles. You can then use your camera facing the ground or at 90-degrees if you're shooting into a flowerbed. Some tripods also have special low lever legs and macro arms that mean you can position the camera at almost ground level. 

 

4. You Can Do Time Lapse Photography

 

Time-lapse photography is all about capturing a sequence of shots a few seconds, minutes, hours or even days apart. These shots are then combined to form a series of images that can be played back as a short video. As any movement of the camera will cause your final piece to appear jaunty you'll need a support for your camera. Take a look at this tutorial for more tips: Time Lapse Photography

 

5. Play Around With Longer Exposures     

If you're planning on taking photos at sunset or in the evening you'll need to use slower shutter speeds so enough light can reach the sensor for the image to expose correctly. But working with slower speeds hand-held can mean shake will blur your shot. A tripod will help reduce this and keep your hands free to hold a cup of tea when you're using really long exposures to capture evening shots such as light trails!

Don't think you just need your tripod in the evening though as to turn the movement of waterfalls, rivers and waves into smooth, dry ice-like textures, you'll need slower shutter speeds. 

  6. Get Your Horizons Straight

 

Most tripods feature spirit levels which will show you if your tripod's straight and you can also buy spirit levels which can be clipped to your camera's hot shoe. Tripods also make it easier to adjust the position of your camera which in turn will move where the horizon sits in your shot. For more tips on why this is important, take a look at this article: Photographing Horizons

 

7. Capture Panoramas

 

Panoramas are created by stitching a series of shots together (either in-camera or during post-production) that you've captured by moving your camera from one side of the frame to the other, allowing for a little overlap between each frame. A tripod will keep your shots steady and level which means they'll be easier to stitch together if you're doing it manually. 

 

8. Shoot Self Portraits

 

Working with your arm outstretched so you can be in frame isn't practical and won't produce award-winning shots anytime soon. For this reason, it's important to have a support so you can frame up, ensuring your horizon is straight if out on location before you take your shot. The same goes for group shots at parties, weddings and other gatherings you attend where you want to be in the frame. It also means you can shoot self-portraits in the studio, leaving the camera framed-up on the spot you want to position yourself in once you've set the camera up. 

 

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Categories: Photography News

Let Your Creativity Bloom: Cover the Washington, D.C. Cherry Blossom Festival Like a Pro

FStoppers - Fri 20 Mar 2026 6:03pm

Every year, the cherry blossom trees around the Tidal Basin and throughout D.C. bloom in a spectacular display of pink and white petals. These annual events provide an opportunity to create stunning landscapes and captivating portraits. In preparation for this year's National Cherry Blossom Festival, here are some tips and tricks to help get you up to speed on where to get the best shots and when to shoot. 

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Categories: Photography News

Macbook Neo Vs Macbook Air Vs Macbook Pro

FStoppers - Fri 20 Mar 2026 5:57pm

Apple just released the incredibly cheap Macbook Neo for $599 and you might be wondering what it's capable of. In this video I'll put it head to head against the Macbook Air, and Macbook Pro.  

To see the results of each test, you'll need to watch the video above but I'll give you a quick summary of what I discovered. 

MacBook Neo

A18Pro, 8GB Ram, 256GB Storage, $599

This is easily the most surprising laptop of the bunch.

Pros

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Categories: Photography News

10 Unwritten Rules of Photography That Nobody Teaches You

FStoppers - Fri 20 Mar 2026 4:03pm

Photography education has a blind spot. Workshops teach you exposure. YouTube teaches you composition. College teaches you history. But nobody sits you down and explains the professional norms that separate working photographers from talented hobbyists who can't figure out why clients aren't coming back. These aren't technical skills. They're behavioral patterns, the kind of knowledge that usually arrives the hard way, after a mistake you can't undo. Here are ten of them, collected so you don't have to learn each one at your own expense. 

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Categories: Photography News

Lightroom's Lens Blur Filter Actually Works If You Use It the Right Way

FStoppers - Fri 20 Mar 2026 2:03pm

Lightroom's lens blur filter got a bad reputation fast. When it launched, some people predicted it would make fast glass obsolete, and then it didn't, because on most real-world photos, cranking it up just looks fake. 

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Categories: Photography News

Saying Hello From Your Grave: Finding Family Through Their Viewfinders

FStoppers - Fri 20 Mar 2026 1:03pm

For many of us, photography has been an outlet for processing loss, grief, and our connection to humanity. One photographer takes us along his own journey in the literal footsteps of his ancestors — through the viewfinders of their very own cameras. 

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Categories: Photography News

Three Personal Branding Looks from One Light: Here's How It Works

FStoppers - Fri 20 Mar 2026 12:03pm

Shooting personal branding with a single light sounds limiting until you see what Lindsay Adler does with one modifier, a few small adjustments, and a corner of the room. The gap between a dramatic, shadow-heavy portrait and a soft, glowing high-key image can come down to nothing more than removing a grid and pointing a light at the ceiling. 

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Categories: Photography News

Five Photography Myths That Are Quietly Limiting Your Portrait Work

FStoppers - Fri 20 Mar 2026 11:03am

Shooting portraits only during golden hour with an 85mm lens sounds like solid advice until you realize it's quietly limiting what you're capable of creating. This video breaks down five of the most common portrait photography myths and explains what to do differently. 

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Categories: Photography News

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