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A young girl hugs a golden retriever while two adults smile in the background, all appearing happy and playful on what seems to be a porch or outdoor area.

Wyze Mocks Ring as Super Bowl Ad Fallout Continues

Amazon's Super Bowl LX ad for Ring doorbell cameras did not go well. It used the most expensive advertising slot in the world to promote "Search Party," a feature ostensibly to find missing dogs. But that's not how it was perceived by viewers.

A speaker stands on stage beside a large screen displaying a great white shark underwater, with an audience seated in front. The stage is lit in blue with "Xposure" signage on both sides.

Xposure 2026: The Largest Photo Festival in the World

Xposure 2026 celebrated its 10th anniversary with A Decade of Visual Storytelling, featuring more than 570 creative events in Sharjah, UNESCO-designated Cultural Capital of the Arab World (1998), from January 29 to February 4, 2026.

How to Capture Unique Landscape Photos

Three vertical landscape scenes: a sun setting behind a desert rock formation, a mountain meadow with blue wildflowers under a bright sky, and a canyon with dramatic clouds and a lightning bolt.

What if creating a truly unique landscape photograph isn’t about finding somewhere no one has ever stood, nor simply revisiting the places everyone knows, but about noticing the extraordinary in both?

This 3D-Printed Camera Can Make You Fall in Love With Panoramic Analog Photography

A hand holds a black film camera with a large lens and a viewfinder, outdoors in front of a blurred airplane and the word "SPACE" partially visible on a building in the background.

I love panoramic photography. There is just something special about a super-wide aspect ratio that flexes my creative muscles. I'm far from the only one. Photographer Jace LeRoy, who goes by analog_astronaut on social media, has also been bitten by the panorama bug. He recently showed off a camera he built, the Infidex 176, which uses 35mm film to capture 72 x 24 millimeter frames, and it's awesome.

A collage of five framed photos on a gray wall, featuring a spiral staircase, a red brick building with fire escapes, a person with blond hair in dramatic lighting, a city street scene, and reflections of lights in water.

WhiteWall’s Laminated Aluminum Dibond Photo Prints Just Got Even Better

Answering requests from many photographers, WhiteWall has announced that Hahnemühle Photo Rag is now available as a lamination option on aluminum Dibond. Further, in response to another request, Hahnemühle Photo Rag Fine Art paper can now be ordered without a white border, which was previously mandatory for prints.

A person is scanning a strip of photo negatives with a digital scanner, which displays a developed image of a wedding party celebrating outdoors.

HP FilmScan 7″ Brings Old Negatives and Slides Back to Life

HP has introduced the HP FilmScan 7" Touch Screen Film Scanner, a user-friendly digitizer designed to convert old negatives and slides into high-resolution digital files without requiring a computer during scanning. Featuring a large touchscreen interface, built-in editing tools, and HDMI output, the FilmScan aims to make preserving film archives simple and accessible.

A compact black digital camera with a wrist strap rests on a wooden table in a softly lit indoor setting, with a blurred background of people and windows.

Ricoh GR IV Firmware Update Adds an Electronic Shutter

Ricoh Imaging has released a new firmware update for the Ricoh GR IV and Ricoh GR IV HDF compact cameras that adds an electronic shutter function to standard GR IV camera, adding the new feature that is already available in the Ricoh GR IV HDF and Ricoh GR IV Monochrome.

A group of football players in a game.

How Canon Gear Captured All the Action During Super Bowl LX

While the Seattle Seahawks bask in the glory of a Super Bowl victory, Canon is taking a victory lap of its own, boasting that it made more than 98 percent of the lenses NBC used for its Super Bowl LX broadcast last Sunday at Levi's Stadium in Santa Clara, California, the home of the San Francisco 49ers.

Two black adjustable light stands with gold accents are shown on the left; one is extended taller than the other. On the right is a close-up of a "MAGMOD" branded clamp on one of the stands.

MagMod Believes it Just Reinvented the Light Stand

MagMod has launched the MagStand on Kickstarter, aiming to rethink one of the most overlooked pieces of gear in photography and video production: the light stand. Within the first 48 hours, the campaign attracted more than 1,100 backers and surpassed $350,000 in funding, positioning it among the strongest recent photo gear launches on the crowdfunding platform.

A triptych showing close-ups of fashion accessories: left, a person holds a green utility bag filled with red-handled tools; center, a foot in a black shoe and blue disposable shoe cover; right, a belt with tools and cords over denim.

‘Assistants’ Celebrates the Unsung Heroes of Fashion Photography

Behind nearly every iconic studio fashion photo is a stylist assistant. These unsung heroes often go entirely unnoticed to the outside world, but they are essential to the photographic process and vital members of the team. A new photography book, Assistants, brings fashion stylists from the background and puts them front and center.

Canon 14mm f/1.4L VCM Review: Major Trade-Offs for Compactness

Close-up view of a Canon camera lens with a red ring on a white background, featuring the "PetaPixel Reviews" logo at the bottom left corner.

Canon has created, in a very short time, a complete line of L-series prime lenses that cater to the hybrid photo and video shooter. It is quite an achievement to build a whole line of professional prime lenses that are all similar in size, weight, and form factor, while still maintaining the quality expected of an L-series optic. The latest addition to the family is the 14mm f/1.4L VMC, a first for Canon in its RF-mount. I took this $2,600 lens for a spin, appreciating its compact nature, but with serious trepidation that Canon may have pushed the envelope a little too far this time.