19 Photography Equipment That Will Transform Your Work (Beyond Camera and Lenses)

Featured

Featured connects subject-matter experts with top publishers to increase their exposure and create Q & A content.

11 min read

Circular silver-white photo reflector on a neutral gray backdrop, reflecting soft light and casting a gentle shadow.

© Image Provided by Featured

19 Photography Equipment That Will Transform Your Work (Beyond Camera and Lenses)

Photography professionals know that the right accessories can be just as transformative as the camera body itself. This guide brings together insights from working photographers who rely on specialized tools to solve real-world challenges on every shoot. From motion control rigs to aerial drones, these 19 pieces of equipment address lighting, stability, workflow, and creative control in ways that standard gear cannot.

  • Design Scenes With Off-Camera Flashes
  • Shift Weight With a Camera Holster
  • Trust a Solid Tripod
  • Unlock Aerial Perspectives With a Drone
  • Shape Portraits With a Large Octabox
  • Stabilize Weddings With a Gimbal
  • Extend Reach With Tether Control
  • Pair a Monopod With Field Notes
  • Master Light With a Reflector
  • Standardize Looks With Ring Illumination
  • Leverage a Compact Motion System
  • Carry a Pocket LED Panel
  • Lock in Color With a Chart
  • Fire Shots With a Shutter Release
  • Adopt AR for Real-World Context
  • Scan for Print-Ready Detail
  • Soften Sun With a Diffuser
  • Use a Circular Polarizer for Clarity
  • Streamline Travel With a Smarter Kit

Design Scenes With Off-Camera Flashes

Absolutely, my go-to has to be my Profoto A10 off-camera flashes!

With over 13 years of experience capturing weddings, blending documentary-style photography with artistic elements, light has always been a key player in my work. I’ve always embraced natural light and adjusted on the fly, but let’s face it, weddings can be wild! Dark barns, dim churches, and the mixed lighting of reception venues with fairy lights, DJ lights, candles, and overhead spots all create their own little chaos: there’s definitely a lot to navigate. Not to mention, the weather isn’t always cooperative for that dreamy, soft glow.

Before I discovered the A10, I found myself in a constant dance of adjustments. Sure, I made it work, but it felt a bit reactive. The introduction of the A10 was a total game-changer! Now, instead of just fixing challenging lighting, I can actually shape it. I can add depth to flat spaces and beautifully separate my couples from the backdrop, building a vivid atmosphere rather than just documenting what’s around.

The most delightful surprise? The consistency it brought to my work. When you’re capturing those once-in-a-lifetime moments, you want everything to be perfect. The reliability of the A10 means I can create stunning, dimensional images no matter the setting. It’s freed me to focus on the couples, staying calm and present without the stress of lighting issues.

And talk about creativity! Instead of shying away from dark corners or tricky backlighting, I’ve leaned into those challenges. I’ve discovered exciting opportunities to create drama, texture, and mood that I would have overlooked before. Now my approach to a wedding day is all about designing the light, rather than chasing it.

It’s truly transformed my work ethic! I’m less reactive and more intentional about what I create. This newfound freedom has not only elevated the quality of my images, but it has also allowed me to show up confidently and calmly for my couples, making the entire experience even more special. I can’t wait to see how it continues to shape my photography journey!

Eszter Szalai


Shift Weight With a Camera Holster

One piece of gear that completely transformed the way I work wasn’t a camera or lens, it was a Spider camera holster belt. After years of shooting weddings with traditional shoulder harness systems, I realized how much strain they were putting on my back and neck. Carrying two camera bodies and moving constantly throughout a 10-hour wedding day meant that the weight distribution was becoming a real ergonomic problem.

Switching to a Spider holster changed that instantly. The cameras sit securely at my hips instead of hanging from my shoulders, which relieves a huge amount of pressure on my back and allows me to move much more freely. I can crouch, run across a dance floor, climb stairs, or pivot quickly without worrying about cameras swinging around or getting tangled.

What I didn’t expect was how much it improved my responsiveness during fast moments. With the cameras sitting at my sides, I can grab either body almost instinctively and switch focal lengths in seconds. At weddings where moments unfold quickly, that freedom of movement makes a real difference.

Over the course of a long wedding day, that kind of mobility and back support adds up. It’s a small change in gear, but it quietly changed the way I move and work throughout an event.


Trust a Solid Tripod

The Tripod: The Non-Negotiable Foundation of Landscape Photography

If I had to name one piece of gear that fundamentally changed my photography, and it’s not a camera or lens, it’s the tripod. Full stop. And I don’t mean it “helped” my work. I mean, it unlocked an entire dimension of image quality and technique that simply doesn’t exist when you’re shooting handheld.

In landscape photography, eliminating camera movement isn’t a nice-to-have – it’s non-negotiable. People romanticize the idea of handholding a shot in the field, and look, it’s admirable. But there are no points awarded for bravery when you’re pixel-peeping a soft frame later that evening. Any exposure slower than 1/250 of a second and you’re gambling with sharpness, period. The wind picks up, your breathing shifts, your footing adjusts on uneven ground and that tack-sharp scene you saw through the viewfinder turns into a subtle, unforgivable blur at 100%.

A tripod removes all of that from the equation. It gives you a locked, repeatable platform, and once you have that stability, doors start opening that you didn’t even know were there.

Take focus stacking. You’re working a scene with foreground interest inches from the lens and a mountain range on the horizon. No single focus point covers that depth of field, even stopped way down. A tripod lets you methodically shift focus from front to back across multiple frames, knowing your composition hasn’t moved a pixel between shots. Try that handheld. You’ll spend more time aligning frames in post than you did shooting them.

Then there’s auto-exposure bracketing. Golden hour hands you a sky that’s four or five stops brighter than the sandy beach at your feet. Bracket three, five, even seven exposures and blend them into a single image with full dynamic range. But every one of those frames has to be in perfect registration. A tripod makes that effortless. Handheld? You’re introducing alignment errors that degrade the final merge if the software can even reconcile them cleanly.

What surprised me most wasn’t the sharpness or the technique it enabled. It was the discipline it imposed on my process. When you commit to setting up a tripod, you slow down. You evaluate the composition more deliberately. You stop spraying frames and start making intentional photographs. That shift in mindset improved my work more than any lens upgrade ever did.


Unlock Aerial Perspectives With a Drone

I’ve been a professional stock photographer and videographer for over 13 years, but my entire creative world shifted the day I launched my first drone.

Before drones, I was constantly fighting for a new perspective, limited by where I could physically place my tripod. Taking to the sky didn’t just add excitement to my career; it unlocked a completely unseen 3D canvas. Suddenly, I wasn’t just capturing landscapes; I was revealing hidden geometric patterns in historic cities and nature that were completely invisible from the ground. Seeing the world from angles that humans were never meant to see was thrilling, not just for me, but for the global agencies licensing my work.

The most memorable part of this evolution isn’t just a single shot, it’s the lifestyle it allowed me to build. Today, I run my premium aerial footage platform, EuroAerials, entirely from a Mercedes-Benz Sprinter campervan. My routine involves waking up before dawn in a new location, launching the drone to catch the pristine morning light, and editing 4K footage while my three cats: Oreo, Pogaca, and Duman, sleep right next to my monitors.

Drones gave me the ultimate freedom: the ability to frame the world from the clouds, and the mobility to chase those frames wherever the road takes me.

Emre Zengin

Emre Zengin, Founder & Premium Aerial Cinematographer, EuroAerials

Shape Portraits With a Large Octabox

I’m a portrait photographer and a large octabox for my main studio strobe changed my photography. I rarely need anything else for most portrait sessions. For the longest time I believed I needed tons of modifiers to change between during sessions. Since getting the large octabox, I find I don’t reach for anything else. Booming the octabox from above and feathering it creates standout portraits. Adding grids and internal diffusers to the octabox allow you to modify the light even further, giving endless possibilities.

Rachon Denae

Rachon Denae, Photographer, Speak Pixels

Stabilize Weddings With a Gimbal

Getting a gimbal changed how we shoot weddings. I noticed the difference during a tea ceremony where we could weave through tight tables without the camera shaking. The footage just looked smooth. We use them on every job now because it keeps the focus on the couple instead of our movement. If you want your shots to move more, get one. I was surprised how much it helped us work faster and made the final videos look better.


Extend Reach With Tether Control

A tether cable/remote app. Using an external device to control the camera enabled me to start shooting images that before I simply wouldn’t have been able to. For example, using a telephoto lens on a C-stand for a top-down image with minimum distortion, or balancing the tripod in a ridiculous spot where I simply can’t stand with the camera.


Pair a Monopod With Field Notes

Two pieces of equipment that transformed my photography were surprisingly simple. One is technical, the other is not strictly camera gear at all.

The first is a monopod used upside down. When photographing wildlife from safari vehicles it can be difficult to achieve a truly low angle, which often creates a stronger and more immersive perspective. My solution was to attach the camera to a monopod along with a cable release, then hold the setup down over the side of the vehicle. Without extra bits and pieces, the camera is effectively hanging upside down, which means the image is inverted, but that is easily corrected later in post processing. The biggest challenge is that you cannot always see exactly what you are photographing. I sometimes flip out the screen to get a rough idea of the framing. You can also connect the camera to a phone via Bluetooth, but I find that too slow in fast wildlife situations. Using a wide angle lens helps, and with time and practice you start to instinctively understand the composition.

The second tool is a small notebook, which is not strictly photography equipment but has had a surprising impact on my work. When spending long periods in the field I began jotting down observations about animal behavior, light conditions, and moments I missed. Over time those notes helped me recognize patterns and anticipate scenes before they happened. It shifted my mindset from simply reacting with the camera to observing more carefully first. The notes also make it much easier to tell the story around a photograph later. When you return home with thousands of images, those small details about what happened in the moment can easily be forgotten.

Both tools changed my photography in ways I did not anticipate. One helped me physically change perspective, and the other helped me change how I see and remember the moments I photograph.

Johan Siggesson

Johan Siggesson, Fine Art Wildlife Photographer, Johan Siggesson Photography

Master Light With a Reflector

The piece of equipment that changed my photography the most wasn’t a camera upgrade—it was a simple reflector.

Early in my work, I focused heavily on cameras and lenses, assuming better gear would improve my images. But once I started using a reflector regularly, I realized how much control over light matters more than the camera itself. Being able to bounce natural light back onto a subject dramatically improved skin tones, reduced harsh shadows, and added dimension to portraits without needing complex lighting setups.

What surprised me most was how subtle adjustments completely changed the mood of an image. By slightly repositioning the reflector, I could soften midday sunlight, brighten eyes in portraits, or add depth to product shots. It essentially allowed me to “shape” available light rather than fight it.

Another unexpected benefit was efficiency. Instead of setting up multiple lights, I could often achieve the look I wanted with natural light and a reflector in just a few minutes. That made shoots faster and less intimidating for subjects, which often resulted in more natural expressions and better images overall.

It was a reminder that photography is fundamentally about light control, not just camera technology. Sometimes the simplest tools have the biggest impact on how your work evolves.

Xi He


Standardize Looks With Ring Illumination

Investing in a high-quality ring light transformed product photography for digital resources. Beyond improving brightness and color accuracy, it allowed for consistent, shadow-free images of worksheets and practice materials, making them look more professional and engaging online. Surprisingly, the improved visuals increased download and purchase conversions by 28% within two months, as parents responded positively to clearer, more appealing content previews. The experience revealed that small, targeted equipment upgrades can have an outsized impact on user perception and engagement, far beyond technical image quality. Consistency and clarity in presentation not only enhanced brand credibility but also directly influenced measurable business outcomes, showing that thoughtful tools can improve both operational efficiency and customer response in unexpected ways.


Leverage a Compact Motion System

One piece of equipment that genuinely transformed our product photography was the Packshot Edge Bundle by Edelkrone.

On paper, it’s a compact tabletop motion control system. In practice, it’s like having a miniature studio in our pocket. It allows us to shoot perfectly repeatable, smooth product rotations and motion passes with very little space or crew. What surprised me most wasn’t just the precision, it was the confidence it gave us to experiment. Because the movement is programmable and repeatable, we can refine a shot incrementally without losing consistency.

It elevated the perceived production value of even the simplest product shoots. Suddenly, a small object shot in a tight space looked cinematic and deliberate. It also reduced setup time and removed the need for larger rigs, which made smaller commercial jobs more viable.

In an era where gear is becoming smaller and more agile, tools like this typify the shift. High-end results no longer require a full studio footprint.

Ryan Stone

Ryan Stone, Founder & Creative Director, Lambda Animation Studio

Carry a Pocket LED Panel

Most job photos look rough because the lighting is rough, not because the camera is bad. The piece of kit that changed everything for me was a small battery LED panel light, because I can fill dark corners under sinks and in roof spaces without harsh phone flash. It made my before-and-after shots clearer, and I started getting fewer ‘can you show me that again’ calls from clients and builders. The surprise was how much it helped with trust, because good light turns a messy job site into proof.

Jesse Fowler


Lock in Color With a Chart

The piece of kit that changed my photography was a colour checker, because it made my colours consistent across shoots and killed the endless ‘why does this look different’ edit spiral. I started using it after one client round-tripped the same images over colour mood, and I realised the problem was inconsistency, not taste. The unexpected benefit was speed, since once colour was stable, everything else in post got simpler and faster. It improved my work because clients trusted the output sooner and revisions shifted from colour arguments to creative choices.


Fire Shots With a Shutter Release

Honestly, a cheap remote shutter release did more for my real estate photography than any lens I’ve bought. I set the camera on a tripod and hit the button from across the room. No camera shake, no blur. I can tweak a pillow or move a lamp without touching the camera. My photos are instantly sharper and I spend way less time fixing tiny mistakes in editing.


Adopt AR for Real-World Context

One piece of equipment that transformed my photography was a simple augmented reality application paired with a smartphone camera. It pushed me to shoot for real-world context and correct scale instead of isolated studio shots. That change improved how we staged, lit, and framed products and, unexpectedly, led to a 20% drop in returns for a client in the first month. The shift taught me that photography should help customers imagine products in their lives, not just show detail.

Rengie Wisper

Rengie Wisper, Marketing Lead, Escrowly.com

Scan for Print-Ready Detail

One piece of equipment that transformed my photography was a high-resolution flatbed scanner. It let us produce truly high-resolution files for print, which addressed the recurring issue of images that looked fine on screen but lost detail or showed flaws in print. By preserving small text and fine lines, the scanner made it easier to deliver print-ready drafts and reduced surprises at the printing stage. That change improved final product quality in ways I did not expect, because it revealed preparation problems early and streamlined the workflow.

Aqsa Tabassam


Soften Sun With a Diffuser

A piece of equipment that unexpectedly transformed my photography was a portable light diffuser. While I always had my camera and lenses in perfect condition, I never realized how much lighting could impact my shots. The diffuser helped soften harsh sunlight, and it made a huge difference in portrait and product photography, where softer lighting is crucial for flattering results. I didn’t expect the subtle change in light quality to have such a powerful effect on the final image, making my subjects appear more natural and vibrant.

What I didn’t anticipate was how much more flexibility it gave me, especially when shooting outdoors. I was able to shoot in bright sunlight without worrying about overexposed or harsh shadows, which opened up a lot of creative possibilities. The ability to control the light better gave my work a professional touch, elevating the quality of my photos without needing to rely on expensive equipment.


Use a Circular Polarizer for Clarity

A great circular polarizer opened my eyes to the world of photography in ways I never imagined. I was able to not only deepen the blues in the sky but also to remove unwanted glare off of bodies of water and leaves. The clarity this provided made me see things I had never seen before, like texture and color that no amount of editing can duplicate. I was able to bring all of my landscape images to a level of quality that made each image look polished and vibrant as if they were taken in studio and that made each image feel more natural and immersive than ever before.

Shannon Beatty

Shannon Beatty, Real Estate Investor, House Buying Girls

Streamline Travel With a Smarter Kit

One piece of equipment that transformed my photography is an algorithmically optimized modular suitcase that I use as my travel kit. By identifying high utility-to-volume “pivot pieces,” it reduced redundant items and let me travel with about 30% less physical weight on average. That reduction in gear and the system’s focus on utility significantly lowered the mental load of packing and decision making on the road. As a result, I could plan shoots faster and arrive on location ready to work with the right tools for local conditions, which improved both creativity and execution more than I expected.

NAUMAN MIRZA


Related Articles

Up Next