The new FujiLove Magazine is here, and this month’s issue brings together reflection, technical clarity, and the quiet joy of seeing the world with a camera in hand. It is an edition shaped by atmosphere and intention — one that encourages you not only to make photographs, but to feel your way into them.
What’s Inside This Month
We begin with a beautifully atmospheric photo essay, For the Love of Fog, which invites us to see weather not as a limitation, but as a collaborator. Fog becomes character, mood, and narrative — gently dissolving details and sharpening emotional tone. It’s a reminder that sometimes the softest light carries the strongest presence.
From there, we move into personal ground. Zack Brescia writes about street photography as a way of coping — how walking with the camera can offer structure, rhythm, and recovery when life becomes overwhelming. It’s honest, grounded, and deeply resonant for anyone who has ever relied on daily photography as a stabilizing practice.
We also join Dominik Golob in Budapest with the X100VI in hand. His piece is not a gear review, but a meditation on minimal equipment and deliberate seeing. The city unfolds in fragments of geometry, color, and stillness — showing what can happen when we trust a single camera and lean into intuition.
This issue also brings a strong educational core:
- Thoughtful exposure guidance for Fujifilm shooters
- Practical batch processing workflows in Lightroom
- Portrait lighting approaches that create depth and quiet drama
- A continued conversation on creative motivation, progress, and inertia
Each piece is built to be used — on your next walk, your next portrait session, your next quiet hour editing at the desk.
New Lens Guide Release
We are also releasing the newest FujiLove Lens Guide this month, written by Dylan Goldby and focused on the Viltrox 56mm F1.2 Pro. As with all our Lens Guides, this is not a technical data sheet. It is a photographer’s perspective — how the lens feels, how it behaves in motion, where it excels, and where it compromises.
This guide takes an honest look at whether the Viltrox stands as a real-world alternative to Fujifilm’s own XF56mm F1.2 WR, especially for portrait and documentary photographers. If you work with people, details, or subtle light, this guide will clarify the decision in a grounded and practical way.
Available Now
Both the new magazine issue and the Lens Guide are available now in the FujiLove Subscriber Area.
Set aside a moment for yourself — a quiet morning, a late evening, a train ride.
This month’s edition invites slow reading, reflection, and maybe even a little rediscovery.

















