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  • Lights Your Way

    On location, in a studio, or on your dining room table -- these light kits will do the trick.

    Sometimes, to kick your photography up to the next level, a catalyst in the form of new gear can help. Take off-camera studio lights. Applied creatively and with persistence, these can pay off in portraits, interior shots, and still lifes with a clean professional edge that's almost impossible to get any other way -- not using available light, and certainly not with on-camera flash.

  • Review: Think Tank Pixel Pocket Rocket

    This super-cool memory card carrying case looks just like a typical nylon fold-up wallet, but it is specifically designed to hold up to 10 CF cards snugly and securely.

    There is one little detail that is noticeably missing from the Think Tank Rotation 360º, which is a dedicated memory card pouch or pocket. But don't despair.
    Think Tank makes a super-cool memory card carrying case, the Think Tank Pixel Pocket Rocket. This looks just like a typical nylon fold-up wallet, but it is specifically designed to hold up to 10 CF cards snugly and securely. There's a see-through window to slide in a business card, should it get lost, but the odds of that happening diminish greatly when the Pocket Rocket is clipped securely to a belt loop or bag.

  • Field Test: Think Tank Rotation 360º Camera Bag

    I look at new camera bag concepts suspiciously. Isn't it simply reinventing the wheel? Aren't all these supposed innovations simply bells and whistles? Why would anyone want such a strange-looking backpack bag as the Think Tank Rotation 360º (Street: $280)? Isn't it too much fabric and padding without enough storage? Why in the heck would I want to study an instruction manual for a camera bag?
    Because it works. That's why.

  • HDRI Tutorial: Master Moving Objects With FDRTools

    FDRTools' powerful de-ghosting features open up a whole lot more of the world to high dynamic range imaging.

    There are only a handful of useful cross-platform high dynamic range (HDR) programs available, and we're happy to report that after our testing, we'll gladly add FDRTools (www.fdrtools.com) to this short list. This program has a serious-looking Graphical User Interface (GUI), and a workflow that is quite different from its main cross-platform competitors, Photomatix Pro and Adobe Photoshop CS2. But the bottom line is that it works, and it offers some powerful features and functions behind that intimidating interface.

  • Hands On: Adobe Photoshop Lightroom 1.0

    Adobe's next generation photo software is a full-featured, all-in-one imaging solution for serious shooters.

    Lucky us -- we got to try Lightroom 1.0 just before its official debut. This milestone for Adobe radically rearranges key Photoshop functions within a super-streamlined virtual workspace designed for organizing and processing large groups of images. Lightroom 1.0 should be familiar to the many people who've been using the free Public Beta. The commercial version has been further augmented and refined, and it's available for both Windows and Mac OS (available for purchase February 19 for $199).

  • Four Light Portrait How To

    Four strobes, plus fire, make for a magical portrait set-up.

    When a magician friend called recently to ask if I would shoot a promotional image for his marketing efforts, I quickly researched other shots of magicians and found the majority to be poorly lit and frankly a little boring. So to set ourselves apart from the rest, we decided to do something a little different.
    Our first idea was to incorporate one of any magician's best tools, fire. My friend wanted a casual look for his show, so he dressed down in his on-stage attire and I set up my lights.

  • Software Hands On: In the Zone

    LightZone software gives the old-school Zone System a totally modern twist.

    Lots of photographers couldn't care less about removing their ex from a photo, adding text, or taking years off the life of a subject. What they really want to do is fix the things that they could always fix in the darkroom -- contrast, tone, and color. Light Crafts' Light-Zone 2.0 is a program for those who've gotten fed up with learning software that has far more tools than they could ever use, and who instead want more control over the way their pictures look.

  • Which Card Reader Should I Buy?

    If each of your cameras take different kinds of memory cards, here's the reader for you.

    If each of your cameras take different kinds of memory cards, here's the reader for you.
    Q: I have a DSLR that uses CF cards, a point-and-shoot that takes SD cards, and a camera phone that uses MicroSD cards. My laptop has FireWire and USB 2.0 connectors, but I don't want to attach my cameras directly and waste their batteries. What's the best card reader for me?

  • The Goods: Cool Gear You're Going to Want

    A smarter lightmeter, spiffier camera bag, stronger tripod, and other cool new stuff.

    Smarter Meter

  • How to Pimp Your Flash

    Three great ways to spark up your flash photography.

    Whether the flash for your SLR or DSLR is a built-in popgun or a fully tricked-out flagship, with the right add-ons, you can have more power, creative options, and fun. Here are two new shoe-mount flash accessories, and one old standby...
    1 Quantum Turbo Slim Compact Battery