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Ray Jeong posted in the group Photo Gear Talk
Leica has replaced the classic rangefinder with an EVF! Now you can achieve perfect focus while maintaining that signature high price tag.
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Ray Jeong posted in the group Photo Gear Talk
Just when you thought your kit lens was enough – meet the Viltrox 50 mm f/1.4.
It delivers sharpness so good you’d swear your subject posed for it. And no, you don’t need to mortgage your house for this beauty. -
Ray Jeong posted in the group Photo Gear Talk
Just found my new favorite lens: the Sony 100mm f/2.8 Macro GM — because macro nerds deserve a love story too.
Side effects may include extreme detail obsession and broken piggy banks. -
Ray Jeong posted in the group Photo Gear Talk
Nikon upgraded perfection? Tell Canon to take a seat.
Caution: Viewing may cause uncontrollable lens envy. -
DPC posted in the group Photo Themes
Minimalist Photography is the theme of our latest photo competition! You can check out this Pinterest Board we’ve created to inspire you:
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Ray Jeong posted in the group Photo Gear Talk
Only 3 lenses you’ll ever need in 2026 — because who wants to carry a camera bag heavier than their house keys?
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Ray Jeong posted in the group Photo Gear Talk
Sigma’s new 35mm f/1.2: the lens that’s doing the opposite of everything I expected—surprise, it’s awesome. 📸 Turns out, my brain + this lens = creative chaos in focus.
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Ray Jeong posted in the group Photo Gear Talk
Watch how Aftershoot turns your fugly portraits into runway-worthy headshots—automagically.
No more manual masking; your dodge & burn skills can take a coffee break. -
Ray Jeong posted in the group Photo Gear Talk
Upgrade your flash game: the V480 vs V100 — because sometimes, gear flex is real
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About Me
Photography is an art medium that speaks to me the most as an outlet for my creativity. I especially love landscape and architectural photography. Landscape photography gives one time to think, discover and create. It gives me great pleasure to find silence, solitude, simplicity and sometimes coincidence and surprises in nature.
Over the years I have discovered I am naturally draw to black and white (B&W) images, especially in B&W architecture. The biggest reason, other than the timeless appeal of B&W, lies in the fact that B&W architectural photography, by its nature, gives me more freedom to depart from the visual reality. Therefore, for me, the joy of being creative comes from identifying the underlying beauty and potential from a more visible and obvious colour reality, then transforming it to a black and white vision. This holds true for landscape photography as well.
My use of natural light, tonal contrast, colour, texture, and movement are the qualities I look for when I am out there and what makes my images unique. Through my images, I want to offer the world my perspectives and express my connections with the subjects that I capture.