Below you will find pages that utilize the taxonomy term “workflow”
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Lightroom Ecosystem: Mobile-to-Desktop Sync Secrets
One of the most useful promises of the modern Lightroom ecosystem is also one of the easiest to misunderstand. The idea sounds wonderfully simple: shoot on one device, begin editing on another, and finish anywhere. In practice, photographers often discover that cloud-based workflow is less magical than advertised. Albums do not update when expected. Flags appear on one device and vanish on another. A batch of edits seems frozen in transit.
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The Invisible Filter Hack: Step-Up Rings
A camera bag can become inefficient in ways that do not look dramatic at first. One of the easiest places this happens is filter management. A photographer buys a 67mm circular polarizer for one lens, then a 72mm variable ND for another, then maybe a 77mm protective filter for a third. Before long, the bag contains a small metal ecosystem of duplicate accessories, mismatched caps, extra cases, and a constant need to remember what fits what.
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Creating an Anamorphic Look from a Regular Photo in Post-Processing
An actual anamorphic lens changes the geometry of the image before it ever reaches the sensor, so the effect is partly optical and impossible to reproduce perfectly afterward. Still, a surprising amount of the “anamorphic feeling” can be recreated in post processing. The trick is to think about what visually defines anamorphic imagery. Three things usually stand out: an extremely wide cinematic frame, horizontal light streaks, and the distinctive oval shape of out-of-focus highlights.
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MacBook Neo in a Photographer’s Workflow: A Surprisingly Capable Budget Companion
Apple’s new MacBook Neo enters the market at a price point that feels almost unfamiliar for a Mac. Starting at $599, it sits closer to the territory of student laptops and Chromebooks than the traditional creative machines photographers have relied on for years. Yet when you look at its actual capabilities — Apple silicon performance, a high-resolution Liquid Retina display, long battery life, and macOS compatibility with the entire photography software ecosystem — it becomes clear that this small, colorful laptop could slide into a photographer’s workflow more naturally than its price suggests.
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Workflow for Shooting and Processing Anamorphic Images
Anamorphic photography has a rhythm that feels a bit different from normal shooting. The whole process begins with an image that is intentionally distorted and squeezed inside the camera, and only later unfolds into the wide cinematic frame people associate with anamorphic cinema. When you first see the raw image coming off the camera, it often looks strangely tall and compressed—faces narrow, circles stretched vertically. That’s normal. The lens has squeezed the scene horizontally so that a wider field of view can be recorded onto a standard sensor.
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The Gear That Carries the Shoot: OWC at WPPI 2026
What really anchors a photographer’s workflow isn’t the camera body or even the lens, it’s the chain of small, unglamorous objects that catch, move, and protect the work once the shutter clicks. At WPPI 2026 at the RIO in Las Vegas, that chain is exactly what Other World Computing puts front and center at Booth 422. The focus isn’t abstract performance claims, it’s physical tools photographers can touch, pick up, and mentally place into their own routines, starting with the moment an image lands on a card and ending when it’s safely stored, edited, and delivered.