Fstoppers Tuesday November 11, 2025
While artificial intelligence rapidly consumes entire segments of the photography industry, some specializations — including wedding photography, photojournalism and high-end portrait photography — possess qualities that make them remarkably resistant to replacement by AI systems, notes Fstoppers. In a separate article, the website highlights five photo specialties that may face extinction because of AI, including bulk corporate head shot photography and e-commerse product photography. But there are survival strategies.
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The Guardian Tuesday November 11, 2025
We noted recently that Associated Press photographer Thibault Camus stumbled across a viral image in the days following the recent Louvre Museum heist in Paris. While he was shooting a group of police officers near the museum, a dapper young man in a suave fedora appeared, evoking (to some) Agatha Christie’s famous detective Hercule Poirot. Now, notes The Guardian, the mystery man has been identified as 15-year-old Pedro Elias Garzon Delvaux, a fan of Sherlock Holmes and Poirot who’d been visiting the Louvre.
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Digital Camera World Tuesday November 11, 2025
Affinity editing software became a popular Photoshop alternatives by doing “almost everything that Photoshop did at a fraction of the price with no subscription,” notes Digital Camera World. When the program's developer Serif was bought out by graphics giant Canva, some users worried. Now Affinity has been reborn as part of an all-in-one Affinity application that combines photo editing with vector drawing and page layout tools. It’s like Adobe Photoshop, Illustrator, and InDesign all rolled into one, says DCW. Read the full Story >>
AnOther Tuesday November 11, 2025
To enter Nan Goldin’s new exhibition at Milan’s Pirelli Hangar Bicocca (through Feb. 15, 2026) “is to delve deep into the photographer’s subconscious mind and potent emotional world,” notes Another. Titled "This Will Not End Well" – a foreboding warning of the intensity in store – the show takes Goldin, one of the most famous living photographers, and repositions her as a full-blown filmmaker, adds writer Violet Conroy. “I never cared about photography too much … whereas film has been my number one medium all my life,” says Goldin. Read the full Story >>