Take Control of iPhone Photography, 2nd Edition
The big 2nd edition of my book on how to take great photos with your iPhone is now available!
The big 2nd edition of my book on how to take great photos with your iPhone is now available!
Big truck big truck I got to ride in a big truck
The new edition of my essential guide to Apple Watch is now out, with a bunch of new material.
I spent the weekend photographing areas of Seattle using two of the top Android camera phones for a new CNET article.
The latest episode of the PhotoActive podcast is all about editing photos on the iPad and iPad Pro.
In my latest Smarter Image column for PopPhoto, I look at three tools for replacing skies in photos.
I thought I was done with Photoshop Elements when my Classroom in a Book wasn't renewed, but no! The Photoshop Elements Visual QuickStart Guide is now available, with 2 hours of videos in addition to the book!
View a sneak-peek video of my AI and machine learning session at the CreativePro Week event May 9-13, 2022 in Washington, D.C.
Millions of people take billions of photos using the built-in Camera app on their iPhones, so we wanted to do an episode all about the clever and sometimes hidden capabilities of this camera that’s always with you. A few things are obvious, but I’m sure there’s at least one or two you may not know ...
Jeff and Mason look at embarrassing photo mistakes they've made and try to find a way forward.
We’ve made some big mistakes, and no - this podcast isn’t one of them! In this episode we share some of our blunders in hopes that you can learn from them, just like we have.
When Kirk bought his Leica Monochrom, I knew we'd get into more black-and-white content on the PhotoActive podcast, but this week we may have taken it too far. We welcome back retinal neuroscientist Bryan Jones as our guest to talk about why color doesn't even exist!
Scott Kelby knows how to make great travel photos, and since we’re all itching to get out of our homes and explore the world with our cameras, he’s our guest for a long conversation on travel photography.
I have a new article at TidBITS about an utterly charming service: Eat Your Books. It’s a site that lets you search your physical cookbooks for recipes and ingredients. Eat Your Books doesn’t store the recipes themselves. Instead it’s a database of more than 160,000 cookbooks. You tell it which ones you own, and then ...