Gear Reviews

Fstoppers gear reviews are written by photographers who actually use the equipment — not benchmark testers looking at spec sheets. This section covers cameras, lenses, lighting, accessories, bags, software, and everything else in a working photographer's kit. The goal is always the same: give you an accurate picture of whether something is worth your money before you spend it.

Nikon ZR Tested on a Real Road Trip: Is It Worth Carrying All Day?

Picking the right cinema camera for run-and-gun work is rarely straightforward, and the Nikon ZR raises real questions about whether its feature set justifies its size and complexity for everyday shooting. This video puts that to the test not on a studio set or controlled shoot, but on a full movie-location road trip through Flagstaff, Arizona.

Lumix L10 vs. Fujifilm X100VI: Which $1,500 Compact Actually Delivers?

The Lumix L10 is a compact camera built around a 26 MP Micro Four Thirds sensor, a fixed Leica-branded zoom lens, and a spec sheet that will make you question whether Panasonic even knows how to make a simple camera. At $1,500, it sits in a crowded space occupied by cameras like the Fujifilm X100VI, and the question worth asking is whether it can hold its own.

Thypoch 24-50mm f/2.8: Half the Price of Sony's Version, But Is the Image Quality There?

Thypoch built its reputation on manual focus prime lenses, so when the company announced an autofocus zoom, nobody saw it coming. The Thypoch 24-50mm f/2.8 is not only the brand's first zoom lens, it's the first autofocus zoom lens to come out of China entirely, and it lands at $619 on Sony E-mount, undercutting the Sony 24-50mm f/2.8 G by roughly half.

Leica M11-D Review: What Shooting With No Screen Actually Does to Your Photography

The Leica M11-D is a digital camera with no rear screen, and that single omission is either its greatest flaw or its greatest feature depending on how honest you are with yourself about how you actually shoot. If you've ever told yourself you'd stop chimping and never followed through, this camera calls that bluff immediately.

The Fujifilm XC 13-33mm Kit Lens Is Cheap, Wide, and Surprisingly Capable on Some Cameras

The Fujifilm XC 13-33mm f/3.5-6.3 OIS is the one of the newest kit lens options for the Fujifilm's X-mount system, and it takes a different approach than most. Instead of the typical 15-45mm range, this lens goes wider, giving you a full frame equivalent of 20mm to 50mm, which opens up genuinely different shooting possibilities for landscapes, interiors, selfies, and vlogging.

Testing The Allen Smart Suction Snap Camera Mount

Today, I'll have a quick look at the new Allen Smart Suction Snap Camera Mount. It's a tool designed for mounting compact mirrorless cameras, action cams, and smaller DSLRs to smooth surfaces via a suction cup that can deliver dynamic moving shots.

An Impressive Ultra-Wide Lens For APS-C: 7Artisans AF 10mm F2.8 Z

APS-C cameras are quickly becoming the main choice for everyday photography. I've owned a Nikon Z50 for seven years now, and it's still my favorite everyday camera, especially for travel, street, and urban photography. But finding lenses for it has always been a problem.

The Best Camera for Fujifilm X100VI Fans Who Want Interchangeable Lenses

The Fujifilm X-E5 sits in an interesting spot in the Fujifilm lineup: it has the same 40-megapixel sensor as the Fujifilm X-T5 but in a body closer in size to the X100 series, with interchangeable lenses. After a year of daily use, including replacing the X-T5 as his main body, Mitch Lally has a clear picture of exactly who this camera is for and where it falls short.

Freewell Launches a Very Slim Variable ND/CPL Filter Kit

My first impression when pulling Freewell's latest filter kit offering out of its packaging was how small and light it was. Filter kits tend to be bulky and take up lots of space, often housed in boxes that take up valuable space in camera bags too. They can be a nuisance to lug around. Not this kit. I immediately liked it.

HUANUO FlowLift Monitor Arm and VESA Mount Review: An Inexpensive Upgrade That Actually Works

Want to reclaim your desk space and maybe even reduce the pain in your neck by optimizing your viewing angle? Consider a monitor arm. Here, we take a look at the HUANUO FlowLift™ Single Monitor Mount (formerly SS6, but still model HNSS6). I also discuss the HUANUO Universal VESA Mount Adapter Kit (Model HNMUA4), which was needed for my particular monitor. How well did they work? How easy were they to install?

Lumix S1 II Review: Incredible Dynamic Range, But There's a Catch

The Lumix S1 II sits at $3,200 list price, currently discounted to around $2,900, and it's trying to compete with video-focused cameras from Canon, Sony, and Nikon on both features and value. Whether it actually pulls that off depends heavily on a few specific trade-offs that aren't obvious from the spec sheet.

The Viltrox 35mm f/1.2 Lab N Fixed What Was Already a Near-Perfect Lens

Viltrox's 35mm f/1.2 Lab was already one of the sharpest, most capable lenses in its class when it launched. The new "N" version strips out the OLED screen and replaces the unconventional control ring with a traditional aperture ring, and that single change makes a lens that was optically exceptional finally handle the way it should.

The Best 35mm Lens for Fujifilm X Isn't What You'd Expect

Choosing a normal-length prime for your Fujifilm X system sounds straightforward until you realize there are seven legitimate autofocus options sitting in roughly the same focal length range, each with a different price, build, and rendering character. The gap between the best and worst of them is smaller than you'd expect, but the differences in autofocus reliability and real-world usability are anything but trivial.

Why a Career Canon Shooter Is Switching to the Nikon ZR

The Nikon ZR is a camera that has generated a lot of conversation since Nikon acquired Red Cinema, but most of that conversation focuses on specs and codec comparisons. What's harder to find is a perspective from someone who actually shot on a Red camera for years, sold it, moved on, and then picked up the ZR expecting to be underwhelmed.

Fujifilm X-T30 III Review: 6.2K Video in a $1,000 Camera Is Hard to Ignore

The Fujifilm X-T30 III sits at $1,000 body only, positioning it as one of Fujifilm's most accessible entry points into the X-series system. For that price, you're getting a 26-megapixel APS-C camera with some video specs that don't match what you'd expect from a camera in this range.

The Nikon Z 14-30mm f/4 S Is Still the Go-To Wide Angle Zoom for Many Nikon Shooters

The Nikkor Z 14-30mm f/4 S has been on the market since 2019, and it remains the wide angle zoom that ends up on more Nikon Z mount cameras than probably any other. At its current discounted price of around $1,100, the calculus of buying it versus something like the Nikkor Z 14-24mm f/2.8 S at roughly $2,000 gets very interesting very fast.

The Tamron 35-100mm f/2.8 Might Replace Your 24-70mm

The Tamron 35-100mm f/2.8 sits in an interesting spot: it's compact and light enough to travel with, but fast enough to handle portraits, events, and low-light shooting. At around $899, it's priced to compete with other mid-range zooms, and whether it delivers enough to justify that price is genuinely worth understanding before you buy.

We Review the DJI Osmo Pocket 4: A Small-Size Pocketable Camera With Huge Capabilities.

Since the debut of the first Osmo Pocket series, launched seven years ago, it has quickly grown its user base with its one-of-a-kind design, tapping into a niche market segment by offering quality stabilized video at a pocketable size. While it wasn't perfect back then, it offered an innovative solution for the market's pain point, and it's commendable that they took the risk to do things out of the norm. Fast forward to 2026, the DJI Osmo Pocket 4 is currently at its 4th iteration of product development, keeping the same design language. Building on the success of its predecessor, it now offers enhanced imaging capabilities and further refinements to its user experience.

Tamron's 35-100mm f/2.8 Is a Different Kind of Standard Zoom: Here's the Tradeoff

The Tamron 35-100mm f/2.8 Di III VXD is a fast standard zoom for Sony E-mount and Nikon Z-mount cameras, priced at $899 for Sony and $929 for Nikon. That longer reach comes at a direct cost: you lose the wide end compared to a typical 24-70mm, and whether that tradeoff works for you depends entirely on how you shoot.

Sony a7 V Review: Is the Price Tag Justified?

The Sony a7 V sits at $2,900 and bills itself as an enthusiast camera, but its feature set tells a different story. Whether you shoot stills, video, or both, what's inside this body has real implications for how far it can take your work.

Is the Sigma 35mm f/1.4 Art the Best 35mm Lens for Sony Shooters Right Now?

Choosing a 35mm lens for a Sony camera used to mean paying a premium for the Sony FE 35mm f/1.4 GM or settling for something that fell short in one area or another. The Sigma 35mm f/1.4 DG DN Art changes that math in a meaningful way, and the second version of this lens is smaller, lighter, and improved across nearly every metric compared to its predecessor.

How Sharp Is the Viltrox 35mm f/1.2 STF N on Sony's Most Demanding Sensor?

The Viltrox 35mm f/1.2 is already a well-regarded fast prime, but Viltrox has now released a revised version called the AF 35mm f/1.2 STF N, dropping the LED display and swapping the old control ring for a proper aperture ring. If you shoot Sony E-mount and have been watching this lens, the changes are worth understanding before you spend $999.

Why the Fujifilm X100VI Is the Best Compact Camera for Street Shooting

Compact cameras have exploded in popularity, and finding the right one is harder than it sounds when you're comparing genuinely capable options across very different price points and form factors. The Fujifilm X100VI sits at the center of that conversation right now, and for good reason.

The Canon Cinema EOS C50 After 6 Months: Is It Better Than the C80?

The Canon Cinema EOS C50 is a compact cinema camera aimed squarely at solo shooters and traveling videographers who want cinema-quality footage without hauling a full-size rig. If you already own a Canon Cinema EOS C80 and wonder whether the smaller body is worth the trade-offs, the answer is more interesting than you'd expect.

Lumix S 40mm f/2 Review: Compact Wonder or Autofocus Compromise?

The Lumix S 40mm f/2 is a compact full frame lens aimed squarely at keeping the Lumix S9 system small and pocketable, and it's the kind of release that makes a lot of S9 owners stop and pay attention. At $399, it sits at a price point where the tradeoffs actually matter, and knowing what they are before you buy could save you a lot of frustration.

Sharp and Smartly Priced: We Review the Viltrox 55mm f/1.8 EVO

The nifty fifty has earned its reputation as the go-to standard prime, but the Viltrox 55mm f/1.8 EVO feels like a quiet refinement of that formula. Just a 5mm shift in focal length is enough to change how you see and compose a scene. After testing the new Z mount variety on location, the quality of this lens becomes clear.