A new method allows nearly perfect optical sharpness for scenes requiring a wide depth of field, with just two photos.
Researchers at the Carnegie Mellon University have developed a new type of lens that can keep all parts of a scene in focus.
Digital Camera World on MSN
12 lenses of Christmas: China comes knocking on the door with a boatload of budget camera lenses
Tilt lenses can certainly give you a distinctive and creative look, but so can the Laowa 15mm f/4.5 0.5x Macro – also ...
The RF 45mm f/1.2 is an absolute gem, and I’d love to see more lenses like it.
17hon MSN
Save $500 on the Sony a7 III with 28–70mm lens, a full-frame starter kit that still holds up
If you’ve been trying to step up from a phone or an older camera without spending “brand-new flagship” money, this is a solid ...
The redesigned Camera app in iOS 26 uses Apple’s Liquid Glass style and a new two-tab layout to simplify everyday shooting.
The first supermoon of 2026 will be visible across Asia and Australia on January 3. Here's how you can take a picture worth ...
Researchers from Carnegie Mellon University's College of Engineering have proposed a new photography method that eliminates the need to choose between focusing on the foreground, midground, ...
OPPO India to launch the Reno15 Series on 8 January 2026, introducing one of the most advanced imaging systems in its segment ...
Morning Overview on MSN
This camera can keep 2 depths sharp at once, no refocus needed
For more than a century, photographers have had to choose which part of a scene should be tack sharp and which parts would ...
A soft blur, flash that rendered backgrounds black and dates stamped in the corner – these little details take one back to ...
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