Cameracraft Jan/Feb 2026

Issue 68 is now free to read in LO resolution page turn here!

Please subscribe – it’s £15 a year, and you get unrestricted downloadable 300dpi files which can be viewed as spread and which print really well, if you want to keep selected pages or articles that way, using printers like the Epson ET-8550 in our office. It was bought when these were brand new on the market and still has the original inks, just coming up to refill the Grey and the others still about one-third full.

You get the issue download link sent in an email on or just before the 1st of month (Jan, Mar, May, July, Sept, Nov). In this issue – Dynamic fashion from Paolo Prisco, freezing winter waters from David Forster, busts of light and inspiration from TV camera and lighting professional turned digital expert John Henshall. Reviews of the Leica M EV1, Fujifilm X-E5 with 23mm f/2.8, Fujifilm X Half, Newyi 50mm f/1.1 M lens, and vintage Olympus Pen half-framers from 60 years ago. Plus Gary Friedman’s AI recreation of impossible family photos uniting generations, and Tom Hill’s take on street photography ethics.

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2023 off to a great start!

The world can look very different through the lens… in our January/February 2023 edition, we took a keyphrase ‘Distorted View’ and it runs through the issue in different ways. Michael Colin Campbell remains an early pioneer of digital imaging, with Adobe from the start, after his entry into photography plunged him into the most high-end darkroom work ever with dye transfer printing. William Mortensen proved a fascinating historic photographer to research, with his strangely distorted occult images and nudes hitting the eyes of the photographic world a century ago but still looking contemporary. The third photographer on our cover, Peter Karry, has pursued reflections and altered views in strong colour for many years and won awards for his travel and creative work.

To subscribe on Pocketmags (currently they have a sale on) just go to https://pocketmags.com/f2-cameracraft-magazine

We also have printed copies ready to post – we don’t keep a large stock of back issues so move fast! New subscriptions taken out in January will start with this issue.

Download or read through our July-August edition free

Cameracraft is received exclusively by subscribers and members of The Guild of Photographers. It’s easy to get single copies or subscriptions from this site, and in addition to the printed magazine digital delivery is an eco-friendly low cost alternative which fully supports our unique magazine.

After our subscribers receive their copies whether digital or printed, we wait a couple of weeks before releasing this viewable and downloadable PDF version. It’s a good quality too with the PDF created at Retina screen resolution so you can zoom in or use a large screen. To download and keep you may need to right-click if the PDF opens in a browser window – it’s normal now to have an extension installed which does this. You will however get a better choice of view modes by saving an opening using Adobe Acrobat. Select Two Page view to see the spreads properly, and expand your window to fill your screen. Don’t select ‘Full Screen’ mode as for some reason Adobe make this disable the two-page view!

Your downloaded PDF will include all email and URL links from the text on the pages.

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https://cameracraft.online/wp-content/uploads/2022/07/CCJulAug2022.pdf
Read here using the navigation tools. Download using the link below the embedded version.
Cameracraft May/June 2020

May/June issue free to read

Cameracraft May/June 2020 to read on your tablet, phone or desktop at ISSUU

You can now read Cameracraft May/June 2020 edition, which was sent to subscribers in the first week of May, as a FREE page-turn document with good image resolution.

To receive printed editions as soon as they are off the press subscribe!