Summer Photography Weather Guide: Thunderstorms, Haze, and Long Evenings
A practical summer field guide for photographers: chasing storms, beating heat haze, using extended golden hours, and the PhotoWeather rules that help you catch the best light.
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A practical summer field guide for photographers: chasing storms, beating heat haze, using extended golden hours, and the PhotoWeather rules that help you catch the best light.
Weather matters just as much for portraits and events as it does for landscapes. Here's how to predict soft light, manage wind, plan for rain, and build weather rules for people photography.
PhotoPills dominates sun, moon, and Milky Way planning. But weather is a different problem. Here's what PhotoPills doesn't do—and what to pair it with.
One location is rarely enough. Here's how to strategically set up and manage multiple PhotoWeather locations to catch the best conditions within driving distance—without drowning in alerts.
Clear Outside is the gold standard for manual weather checks. But manual checking has limits. Here's when automated alerts make sense—and when they don't.
PhotoWeather is more than a forecast wrapper. Here's how multi-model blending, derived conditions, and ensemble confidence come together to predict photography weather.
Most weather apps make you do the work. Here's what separates a real photography weather alert app from a dressed-up forecast—and what to look for before you commit.
How to use PhotoWeather’s iCal feeds to place real photography windows inside Apple Calendar, Google Calendar, or Outlook and plan around them.
Why some golden hours glow and others fall flat. Learn how haze, dust, smoke, and air clarity shape color, contrast, depth, and better PhotoWeather rules.
Most weather apps are built for commuting, not camera work. Here's why photographers need cloud layers, direction, confidence, alerts, and location-specific planning instead of generic forecasts.
A practical spring field guide for photographers: clearing storms, dawn mist, blossom light, haze, and the PhotoWeather rules that help you catch them.
Use wave height, period, direction, fog, and wind to plan stronger seascape shoots and build coastal weather rules that match the shoreline you photograph.