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NEWS ARCHIVES
How to Photograph Fireworks
Canon EOS Rebel XSi Review by LetsGoDi
Matt’s Photoshop World Insider’s G
10 Mighty Tips for Macro Photography |
7 Tips for Organizing your Photos
Samsung S85 Review at TrustedReviews
Six Steps to Banish Dust from Your Dig
Canon U.S.A. Celebrates Its Partnershi
Olympus Stylus 830 Review at Steves Di
Tip of the Day: Quick Macro Setup
Tethered shooting on Ubuntu Linux usin
What I’ve been doing…
Digital Outback E-Books - DOP3901 Book
Hands-on with the Fujifilm Finepix Z10
Epson launches new A3+ printer
Calumet Genesis Lighting Kits
JVC GZ-MG335
Digital Photography Workflow - High Co
Canon PowerShot G10 digital camera rep
Smartparts SP3200WF 32-inch WiFi digif
Your Guide to Adobe Bridge: Organizing
Dinner with Greg Gorman and Jeff Schew
HP Introduces Two New Portable Photo P
Save Polaroid. Save the World…
Nikon P80
Jobo announces Photo GPS camera add-on
Mounting your own Photography Art Exhi
Photo Geo-Tagging with DeLorme Topo US
VSO Image Resizer 2.0.0.15
Give Someone Bruises in Photoshop

REVIEWS & PREVIEWS ARCHIVES
Learn the secrets of HDR photography
Canon EOS 1000D Preview
The White Stripes take on film
Canon EOS 5D Mark II is official
Ricoh Caplio R8 Review
Panasonic Lumix DMC TZ3 review
Canon Powershot A610 review
Photo industry braces for another revo
Sunex starts selling Superfisheye lens
Sony Alpha 100 review
Canon puts three new cameras on its A-
Ricoh Caplio GX review
FujiFilm FinePix S6500fd review
Sonys new SLR adds heft to full-frame
Polaroid debuts pocket-size photo prin
Olympus preannounces dSLR, Micro Four
Olympus E-410 Review
Canon Powershot SD1100 Review
A 50mm f1.4 lens for Four Thirds from
Sony Cybershot DSC T1 review
Lens Test: Pentax SMCP-FA 50mm f/1.4 A
A cavalcade of compact cameras from Ni
Build a better photoblog this weekend
Going Ultrawide with the Olympus E-3
Camera Test: Sony Alpha 700
Olympus SP 500 UZ review
Kodak enters the fashion fray
Samsung Digimax i6 review
FujiFilm FinePix Z2 review
Power Downloader makes a comic out of
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Feed Provided By Photocritic

The ultimate guide to HDR photography

Haunting, surreal, and quite possibly the first major way in which digital photography does something which film photography can’t emulate - or even come near. HDR - or High Dynamic Range - photography is nothing new, but as new tools and techniques make the artform more available, HDR photography is taking off in a big [...]

TinEye.com photo search engine

You know how it goes - you want to find a photo of the Mona Lisa, so you go onto Google Images, you type in Mona Lisa, and you get hundreds of results. But what if you have an image, and you want to find out what it is of? Or what if you want [...]

Tomorrow, the Story Breaks

Photojournalist James Nachtwey is considered by many to be the greatest war photographer of recent decades. He has covered conflicts and major social issues in more than 30 countries. Last year, he won a $100,000 prize, which he decided to re-invest into a special project… A story he felt needed to be told, which no [...]

Top 50 photography websites

Of course, Photocritic is your favourite photography resource in the whole wide world, and you’d be mad to think otherwise. Nonetheless, I have to admit that there are some pretty damn amazing websites out there. This is my attempt at collecting some of my favourites - which isn’t easy, considering how many bookmarks I have. [...]

Beyond puppies and rainbows

A few weeks ago, I had an e-mail from a reader, who was eager to show off some of her photographs. I was intrigued by her Flickr nickname, and as it turns out, the lady has some pretty exciting ideas about what a photograph should be. If you’re looking for puppies, rainbows and ‘moose in [...]

Taking photos for the future

A photo from 100 years ago is quaint, mysterious, and informative - partially because there aren’t that many of them. Today, everyone has a camera, and everyone is taking photos - In the pub a few months ago, I was talking to a historian about photography, and about what photos taken today would mean to [...]

The death of film photography

“When I was given my first digital camera, I thanked the giver politely and set it on a shelf—where it sat, growing dust, for two years. I simply had no use for it.”, recalls John, a long-time Photocritic reader, who decided to share some of his thoughts about his (at first painful) transition from film [...]

Buying a camera abroad

There’s lots of reasons for why you might want to buy a camera on foreign shores - perhaps you forgot to bring your own camera (idiot!), there’s something wrong with the camera you brought (it happens), or you’re taking advantage of the fact that you’re paid in British Pounds, the US dollar has tanked massively [...]

Travel Photography Tips

Whenever I travel, I have a very loose approach to packing my stuff. Mostly, I pack in less than 20 minutes - regardless if I’m going away for a night or three weeks. There are four checks: Passport, tickets, credit card, and camera. It’s just the way it goes, you can’t get by without either [...]

A photograph isn?t art? it just is.

I good long while ago ago, I posted an article about Roland Barthes’ Camera Lucida. At the time, one of my readers - Wigwam Jones - posted a rather awesome response, and I have been meaning to highlight it at some level - It’s been a long time coming, but here we go - I [...]

Creating your own photography blog

This article discusses the what’s, how’s and why’s of running a photography blog. You’re a photographer, you’ve got a camera - probably one of those flashy SLR jobbies - and you have a harem of groupies who follow you wherever you go, and you make a quarter of a million quid out of a moderately [...]

Picking an SLR camera

Back in April, I did a Top 15 entry-level camera round-up, and it’s one of those posts where the comments stayed relatively calm, but I got tonnes of e-mail afterwards, with suggestions, comments etc. I was surprised at the level of passion people had about that one single article, but it got me thinking: I [...]

Review: Understanding Shutter Speed

“Photography has to be enjoyed by looking at pictures”, my arts teacher used to say, back when I still listened to teachers. I agree with the man, but I’m also a geek, and I love understanding things. I’m the kind of guy who enjoys knowing why the engine makes more noise and the car goes [...]

Geekery

Hey guys, Sorry about more of the geekery, but basically, I’ve spent the past 48 hours trying to make Photocritic better. Part of that was getting shy of my (ludicrously expensive) colo-server, and getting myself on a virtual server instead. One of the geeks I work with (thanks Stuart!) pointed me at SliceHost, and I’m an [...]

iPhone for photographers

Those of you who know me know that I’m never more than a metre away from my iPhone - it has its flaws (as I’ve written about on my personal home page before), but nonetheless, it’s a class piece of kit - and the iPhone 3G is going to make it better still - [...]

Quick update

Lack of updates Sorry about the lack of updates recently, I’ve been mad busy with my day-job recently (excitingly, we just launched our version of BBC’s iPlayer, known as Demand Five, yesterday), and I’ve got an exciting extension to Photocritic which is coming up soon, so I’ve mostly been doing behind-the-scenes work. Want to contribute an [...]

8 steps to sharper photos

So you’ve finally graduated from taking photos with a compact, and have your grubby little paws on a fantastic digital single-lens reflex. All good and well, but why don’t your pictures come out as fantastic as some of the ones you see on Flickr? Surely, they’re using the same camera as you - where are [...]

Stabilising a cheap tripod

Tripods are cheap as chips nowadays, but the cheaper ones have a few flaws. Most importantly, they are too light, and too unstable. So what do you do when you are working on macro stuff, and your tripod won’t stop vibrating, or the high winds are trying to disturb your photographic peace? Quite simply, most [...]

Canvas printing

There’s web galleries, there’s your mum’s photo printer, and then there is this… One of the most beautiful ways of presenting photographs has to be getting your photos transferred onto canvas. The cool thing is that you can get quite creative what you do on a canvas - just ask Rembrandt & co! There are a [...]

Photographic treasure-hunt: Shoot Experience!

Combine a good old-fashioned team-based treasure hunt with a photography competition, and you’ve got a recipe for success, right? Well, that’s what I thought too, when I signed up to attend Shoot London, an event based out of the Tate gallery, organised by Shoot Experience, a company who organises these kind of events for public [...]

From microstocks to megabucks

Or: The economics behind Microstock. I make little secret of my dislike for microstock, as re-iterated in my ‘The Problem with Microstock‘ article a few weeks back. The curse of having a relatively high-profile blog, however, is that people tend to disagree with you. Well, that’s not really the curse, that’s a fact of life. [...]

Canon compact camera cracking

Okay, so technically it’s ‘hacking’ rather than cracking, but that’d ruin my beautifully alliterative subject line. Anyway… If you’re using a consumer grade point-and-shoot Canon digital camera, you’ve got hardware in hand that can support advanced features way beyond what shipped in the box. With the help of a free, open source project called CHDK, [...]

WINNERS: one of 5 copies of my book!

Right, the winners for the competition have been picked! By deadline, there were 151 competition entries, and I used Random.org to pick the winners. The winners are: #2 - ryan97ou #88 - Luís Brás #120 - John Jimenez #116 - Tim Norris #98 - Aaron Snowden I’ll e-mail you all as soon as to get your addresses so I can [...]

5 ways to deal with negative photo-critiques

It is relatively self-explanatory that doing a photo critique is quite difficult. What few people stop to think about, however, is that receiving a photo critique can be as difficult - if not more difficult: When you move beyond mere snapshots and start putting more of yourself into your photographs, you are a lot more [...]

How exposure works

To understand exposure in photographical terms, EV is probably the single most important number you will have to understand, to understand the theory behind the art of photography. This goes from your tiniest, least significant compact camera, to your cock-on-the-table style medium format camera with a digital back. Non-technical Let us imagine a value called TCE. This [...]

10 ways to make Google love your photography site

You’re working as a photographer, you take fantastic photos, and you’ve even got a pretty sweet website to show off your work… So why is your web server just sitting around in the corner, smoking a fag and nipping at a cup of coffee? Why aren’t the buyers running the door off its hinges, and, [...]

Sharpening photos in the darkroom

In the past, we’ve covered why it is important to sharpen your photos, and how you can use the Unsharp Mask tool in Photoshop to make sure your photos look their best. I am a firm believer of understanding how things are done manually, however. If you are to take shortcuts, you have to know [...]

Teaching yourself photography

Imagine, for a second, that you are a young person with a camera. There are other cameras in the world around you, and there are people who use those cameras, too, but nobody really knows what they are doing, nobody can teach you anything you don’t already know, and the only tool you have in [...]

Why sharpen your images?

This week, I received a rather good question from one of my old friends, Cindy. She was wondering “how come that whenever I’m taking digital images, I have to sharpen them afterwards?” Good question, and of course, it’s already one step ahead of the curve, in that the question presupposes that yes, you DO have [...]

Wired photography contests

Recently, Wired.com has started doing a series of very cool photography contests, and I’ve been meaning to recommend them to people for a while. Participating in photography contests is generally a good idea, actually: It keeps you on your toes, and it very much helps to keep thinking about what you are doing with your [...]






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