Photography and fine art print fairs have become one of the most important spaces in the market — not just for buying and selling, but for developing the educated eye that good collecting requires. A day at a strong print fair exposes you to more work, more price ranges, and more practitioners than months of online browsing. Here are the events worth prioritizing in … [Read more...] about Print Fairs Worth Attending in 2026
Where to Buy Authentic Fine Art Prints — and How to Avoid Reproductions
The fine art print market has a counterfeiting and misrepresentation problem. It is not as severe as in painting, but reproductions sold as originals, open editions sold as limited, and unsigned prints sold with fabricated documentation are real risks — especially in the online secondary market. Knowing where to buy and what to look for is the most effective protection a … [Read more...] about Where to Buy Authentic Fine Art Prints — and How to Avoid Reproductions
Emerging Photographers Whose Prints Are Worth Acquiring Now
Identifying emerging photographers whose work will matter is part skill, part experience, and part luck. No one can predict with certainty which names will define photography in twenty years. But certain signals — exhibition history, institutional interest, critical reception, and the quality of the work itself — give informed collectors a meaningful advantage over buyers who … [Read more...] about Emerging Photographers Whose Prints Are Worth Acquiring Now
How to Start a Photography Print Collection on a Modest Budget
The assumption that fine art print collecting requires significant wealth is one of the most persistent myths in the photography market. It was never entirely true, and in 2026 it is less true than ever. A collector with a modest annual budget — even a few hundred dollars — can build a meaningful collection of original prints by living photographers if they approach it … [Read more...] about How to Start a Photography Print Collection on a Modest Budget
Large-Format Inkjet: What Changes Above 24 Inches
Most photographers who produce their own prints work on desktop inkjet printers — typically 13-inch or 17-inch wide format machines. These are capable of producing beautiful work. But there is a category above them that requires different equipment, different file preparation habits, and a different relationship with the print as an object. Once you cross 24 inches in width, … [Read more...] about Large-Format Inkjet: What Changes Above 24 Inches
Letterpress for Photographers: Pairing Typographic Titles With Image Prints
Letterpress printing and photography have a longer shared history than most people realize. In the late 19th and early 20th centuries, photographic images were routinely combined with letterpress-printed text in books, portfolios, and exhibition catalogues. The reunion of these two processes in contemporary fine art print practice is not nostalgia — it is a considered choice … [Read more...] about Letterpress for Photographers: Pairing Typographic Titles With Image Prints
Risograph Printing: Why Indie Publishers and Artists Are Obsessed
The Risograph is, technically, an office duplicator — a stencil-based printing machine developed by the Japanese company Riso Kagaku Corporation in the 1980s for high-volume, low-cost document reproduction. It was designed to replace photocopiers in offices and schools. Nobody, when it was released, expected it to become a beloved tool of independent artists, zine makers, and … [Read more...] about Risograph Printing: Why Indie Publishers and Artists Are Obsessed
Cyanotype in 2026: The Analog Revival That Won’t Quit
Cyanotype is one of the oldest photographic processes in existence. Invented by Sir John Herschel in 1842, it produces the characteristic Prussian blue images that generations of blueprints were built on. Anna Atkins used it to create the first photographically illustrated book in 1843. By rights, it should be a historical curiosity. Instead, cyanotype in 2026 is more widely … [Read more...] about Cyanotype in 2026: The Analog Revival That Won’t Quit
A Beginner’s Guide to Screen Printing on Fine Art Paper
Screen printing — also called silkscreen or serigraphy — is one of the oldest and most versatile printmaking processes still in wide use. Associated primarily with Andy Warhol's factory output and the golden age of rock poster art, it has also been a serious fine art medium for decades. For artists and printmakers coming to it for the first time, screen printing on fine art … [Read more...] about A Beginner’s Guide to Screen Printing on Fine Art Paper
Silver Gelatin vs. Inkjet: A Practical Comparison for Photographers Selling Their Work
For photographers deciding how to produce and sell prints of their work, the choice between silver gelatin and inkjet output is one of the most consequential they will make. Each approach involves different equipment, different skills, different costs, and different market positioning. Neither is universally better — but the right choice depends heavily on your practice, your … [Read more...] about Silver Gelatin vs. Inkjet: A Practical Comparison for Photographers Selling Their Work