TheAppWhisperer.com

TheAppWhisperer.com One of the foremost online resources for mobile photographers written by professional photo technology journalists, including writing for dpreview and more

Joanne Carter is the Founder and Editorial Director of TheAppWhisperer.com. A Professional Photographer and Associate of the British Industry of Professional Photographers. Joanne is also a Columnist for Vogue Italia and Contributing Editor to LensCulture.

Greatest  Mobile Art Pic of the Day (2,571) today’s photo comes from the talented  highlighting the best mobile  photogr...
29/05/2026

Greatest Mobile Art Pic of the Day (2,571) today’s photo comes from the talented highlighting the best mobile photography and art. With ‘Pic of the Day,’ we aim to create a space that crosses borders, languages, and cultures. We connect through the shared language of visual storytelling, allowing us to appreciate the beauty and diversity of our world.Visual Art & Design

Mobile photography has shown its power throughout our journey. As smartphones and their cameras continue to improve, the opportunity for artistic expression continues to grow. This openness enables creators to share their vision with a global audience, inspiring others to explore their creativity.

I’ve been writing about mobile photography for almost two decades, and if I’m honest, I thought I’d seen most of it by n...
29/05/2026

I’ve been writing about mobile photography for almost two decades, and if I’m honest, I thought I’d seen most of it by now. Every year brings another camera app promising to turn the iPhone into something it isn’t. There are always more controls, more presets, more editing tools, and increasingly, more artificial intelligence. And Halide Mark III made me pause for a different reason.

It wasn’t the new editing tools or the collection of Looks that caught my attention. It wasn’t even the promise of producing better photographs. What stayed with me after reading about the update was the sense that Lux is trying to have a conversation about photography itself rather than simply selling another camera app. That feels increasingly rare.

To read this post in full, please click the link in our Instagram bio or copy and paste this link, into your internet browser - https://theappwhisperer.com/2026/05/halide-mark-iii-and-why-photographers-still-need-to-make-decisions/

Greatest  Mobile Art Pic of the Day (2,570) today’s photo comes from the talented , highlighting the best mobile  photog...
28/05/2026

Greatest Mobile Art Pic of the Day (2,570) today’s photo comes from the talented , highlighting the best mobile photography and art. With ‘Pic of the Day,’ we aim to create a space that crosses borders, languages, and cultures. We connect through the shared language of visual storytelling, allowing us to appreciate the beauty and diversity of our world.Visual Art & Design

Mobile photography has shown its power throughout our journey. As smartphones and their cameras continue to improve, the opportunity for artistic expression continues to grow. This openness enables creators to share their vision with a global audience, inspiring others to explore their creativity.

I was deeply saddened today to hear of the sudden death of mobile photographer and artist Kerry Mitchell.I interviewed K...
28/05/2026

I was deeply saddened today to hear of the sudden death of mobile photographer and artist Kerry Mitchell.

I interviewed Kerry for TheAppWhisperer several times and, like many people within the mobile photography community, I always remembered the quiet sensitivity of her work. Her images never shouted for attention. They didn’t need to. They carried emotion in a much softer and more lasting way.

At a time when so much photography competes to be louder, faster and more immediate, Kerry’s work did the opposite. It slowed you down. There was a calmness to her images, but also something underlying them that felt fragile and deeply human. I think that’s why so many people connected with her photographs.

I remember her work feeling very calm compared to much of what was around at the time. It never felt forced. She wasn’t trying to impress people. The emotion was already there in the image, and she trusted the viewer to find it for themselves.

Having spent almost two decades writing about mobile photographers and artists through TheAppWhisperer, certain artists stay with you, and Kerry was one of them. Not because she was trying to dominate the conversation, but because her work came from a sincere and authentic place. There was a gentleness to it that feels increasingly rare.

The mobile photography community is far more connected than many people realise. Over the years, artists have become part of each other’s lives through interviews, exhibitions, competitions, and online conversations. News like this therefore comes as a genuine shock.

Today, many people will return to Kerry’s work and see it differently. There is always something profoundly sad about revisiting photographs after someone has gone. The images remain still and unchanged, but our relationship to them shifts completely.
My thoughts are with her family, friends and all those who loved her and her work.

Greatest Mobile Art Pic of the Day (2,569) Today’s photo comes from the talented , highlighting the best mobile photogra...
27/05/2026

Greatest Mobile Art Pic of the Day (2,569) Today’s photo comes from the talented , highlighting the best mobile photography and art. With ‘Pic of the Day,’ we aim to create a space that crosses borders, languages, and cultures. We connect through the shared language of visual storytelling, allowing us to appreciate the beauty and diversity of our world.

Mobile photography has shown its power throughout our journey. As smartphones and their cameras continue to improve, the opportunities for artistic expression grow. This openness enables creators to share their vision with a global audience, inspiring others to explore their creativity.

Remember to follow and to include in your posts to be showcased.

#365

Over the past few years, much of my writing and photographic research has increasingly centred on questions of memory, g...
26/05/2026

Over the past few years, much of my writing and photographic research has increasingly centred on questions of memory, grief, spectatorship, and photographic truth. I have become deeply interested in how photographs shape emotional understanding, how images linger in the mind, influence perception, and quietly alter how we remember experiences long after the moment itself has passed. Photography has never simply been about documentation; it is tied to absence, intimacy, trauma and belief. We do not merely look at photographs; we inhabit them emotionally.Photographic & Digital Arts

At the same time, through my work at TheAppWhisperer, I have spent almost two decades observing and documenting the evolution of mobile photography and digital art from its earliest experimental beginnings into a globally recognised artistic movement. I have watched smartphone photography move from heavily criticised beginnings into one of the most important contemporary photographic movements of our time. Yet artificial intelligence represents something different again. AI does not simply alter photographic tools; it challenges the relationship between image and reality itself.

What fascinates me most is the growing tension between creativity and authenticity. Computational photography has already become embedded into almost every image we make on smartphones, often invisibly. But generative AI introduces far more difficult questions. If photographs no longer require lived experience, observation or emotional presence, then what exactly are we looking at?

As part of this ongoing discussion, I invited artists working within mobile and digital practices to reflect honestly on AI and its impact on creativity. In this interview, digital artist Rita Colantonio offers a thoughtful and deeply personal response to those concerns.

To read this post in full, please click the link in our Instagram bio, alternativly, copy and paste this link into your internet browser - https://theappwhisperer.com/2026/05/the-integrity-of-the-fine-artist-must-be-preserved-rita-colantonio-on-ai-and-photography/

Greatest Mobile Art Pic of the Day (2,568) Today’s photo comes from the talented , highlighting the best mobile  photogr...
26/05/2026

Greatest Mobile Art Pic of the Day (2,568) Today’s photo comes from the talented , highlighting the best mobile photography and art. With ‘Pic of the Day,’ we aim to create a space that crosses borders, languages, and cultures. We connect through the shared language of visual storytelling, allowing us to appreciate the beauty and diversity of our world.Visual Art & Design

Mobile photography has shown its power throughout our journey. As smartphones and their cameras continue to improve, the opportunity for artistic expression continues to grow. This openness enables creators to share their vision with a global audience, inspiring others to explore their creativity.

Remember to follow and to include in your posts to be showcased.

It is with great sadness that I learned of the passing of Carol “Dogsitter” Smith, a much-loved member of the mobile pho...
24/05/2026

It is with great sadness that I learned of the passing of Carol “Dogsitter” Smith, a much-loved member of the mobile photography community and a retired police officer whose warmth, humour and creativity touched many people over the years.

Carol belonged to that important generation of early iPhone photographers who helped shape mobile photography into a genuine artistic movement. At a time when many still dismissed photography created on phones, Carol embraced the medium with curiosity, openness and enthusiasm. Her images carried individuality and feeling, but equally important was the kindness she brought to the community surrounding the work.
Beyond photography, Carol had lived a full and dedicated life, serving as a police officer before retiring. There was perhaps something of that experience visible in the way she observed people and the world around her, attentive, compassionate and deeply human.

Online communities can sometimes feel fleeting, but certain individuals leave a lasting impression through the way they encourage others, support creativity and quietly make spaces feel welcoming. Carol was one of those people. Many artists within the mobile photography world will remember her not only for the images she created, but also for her generosity, humour and friendship.

The mobile art movement has always been built upon people willing to share, experiment and connect across distances. Carol helped make those spaces feel personal and alive. Her presence will be deeply missed by many who knew her through years of conversations, shared images and creative exchange.
My thoughts are with her family, friends, and all those within the photographic community who are mourning her loss.

Rest peacefully, Carol.

Image below created by Carolyn Hall Young for one of Carol's birthdays.
It is with great sadness that I learned of the passing of Carol “Dogsitter” Smith, a much-loved member of the mobile photography community and a retired police officer whose warmth, humour and creativity touched many people over the years.

Carol belonged to that important generation of early iPhone photographers who helped shape mobile photography into a genuine artistic movement. At a time when many still dismissed photography created on phones, Carol embraced the medium with curiosity, openness and enthusiasm. Her images carried individuality and feeling, but equally important was the kindness she brought to the community surrounding the work.
Beyond photography, Carol had lived a full and dedicated life, serving as a police officer before retiring. There was perhaps something of that experience visible in the way she observed people and the world around her, attentive, compassionate and deeply human.

Online communities can sometimes feel fleeting, but certain individuals leave a lasting impression through the way they encourage others, support creativity and quietly make spaces feel welcoming. Carol was one of those people. Many artists within the mobile photography world will remember her not only for the images she created, but also for her generosity, humour and friendship.

The mobile art movement has always been built upon people willing to share, experiment and connect across distances. Carol helped make those spaces feel personal and alive. Her presence will be deeply missed by many who knew her through years of conversations, shared images and creative exchange.
My thoughts are with her family, friends, and all those within the photographic community who are mourning her loss.

Rest peacefully, Carol.

Image below created by Carolyn Hall Young for one of Carol's birthdays.

Greatest Mobile Art Pic of the Day (2,567) Today’s photo comes from the talented  highlighting the best mobile  photogra...
22/05/2026

Greatest Mobile Art Pic of the Day (2,567) Today’s photo comes from the talented highlighting the best mobile photography and art. With ‘Pic of the Day,’ we aim to create a space that crosses borders, languages, and cultures. We connect through the shared language of visual storytelling, allowing us to appreciate the beauty and diversity of our world.

Mobile photography has shown its power throughout our journey. As smartphones and their cameras continue to improve, the opportunity for artistic expression continues to grow. This openness enables creators like to share their vision with a global audience, inspiring others to explore their creativity.

Remember to follow and to include in your posts to be showcased.

Mobile  photography no longer ends when the shutter closes. Increasingly, the most compelling photographic practices are...
21/05/2026

Mobile photography no longer ends when the shutter closes. Increasingly, the most compelling photographic practices are being shaped entirely on phones and tablets — from capture and curation through to editing, publishing, archiving and exhibition. For many photographers, especially those working while travelling, commuting or moving between projects, workflow has become just as important as image quality itself.

The best workflow apps are not necessarily the most complicated. In fact, the strongest mobile workflows often emerge from applications that reduce friction. They allow photographers to move fluidly between shooting, editing, organising and sharing without feeling buried beneath menus, subscriptions or unnecessary AI interference.

What follows are the apps that currently form some of the most thoughtful, efficient and genuinely useful mobile photography workflows available in 2026.

To view this post please click on the link in our Instagram bio or copy and paste the following link into your internet browser
https://theappwhisperer.com/2026/05/best-photography-workflow-apps-for-creators-on-the-move-2026/

Greatest Mobile Art Pic of the Day (2,566) Today’s photo comes from the talented  highlighting the best  mobile  photogr...
20/05/2026

Greatest Mobile Art Pic of the Day (2,566) Today’s photo comes from the talented highlighting the best mobile photography and art. With ‘Pic of the Day,’ we aim to create a space that crosses borders, languages, and cultures. We connect through the shared language of visual storytelling, allowing us to appreciate the beauty and diversity of our world.

Mobile photography has shown its power throughout our journey. As smartphones and their cameras continue to improve, the opportunity for artistic expression continues to grow. This openness enables creators like to share their vision with a global audience, inspiring others to explore their creativity.

Remember to follow and to include in your posts to be showcased.

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