The Psychology of Seeing: How the Eye Shapes What We Capture
Photography has always been a dialogue between perception and technology. We lift a camera to our eye not only to record what is before us, but to translate how we see — a process shaped as much by biology and psychology as by glass and silicon. The choices we make when framing a shot, judging light, or sensing balance often feel intuitive, yet those instincts are grounded in the architecture of the visual system and the quirks of the human brain. To understand photography more deeply, it helps to understand that the camera is not our only lens.