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You are in that section: Home > Blog > Blog of the Photographic Creation Approach

To Create Interesting Photos, Master the Photographic Writing

A northern lapwing in backlight on a pond in La Dombes in France. Photograph in black and white by Amar Guillen.
A northern lapwing in backlight on a pond in La Dombes in France. This photograph respects the rules of the black and white photography.
 

Tip #16: Master the Photographic Writing

Mastering and knowing the language of photography is not enough. You must know how to organize the symbols of the writing between them: this is the object of photographic writing.

Language is the function of an expression of thought and communication. It is implemented through writing.

Photographic language takes into account :

  • Aesthetics.
  • Technique.
  • Audience.

For example, if you create abstract photos that have a deep meaning for you but show them to people who only like figurative language, you may use the signs of writing and photographic language correctly, but you will not be understood. You have to be careful with photographic semantics.

Photographic language helps you to compose your photos with the signs of photographic writing in order to be better understood by an audience.

The language of photography allows you to discuss, exchange and share with other people. It is an exchange between two distinct entities.

You need to master it to make your photos audible and understandable.

I have written and published a complete article on photographic language.

5 Steps to Master the Photographic Writing.
 

Tip #17: Define your Elevator Pitch

For me, the elevator pitch is an essential element for a photographer.

The elevator pitch is a short text that you will write and learn by heart.

It should take you less than 30 seconds to recite it. It will define your photographic activity.

Imagine that you meet a person who asks about your photography. You are in an elevator. You have 30 seconds to make them understand and get their attention.

You need to tell a short, compelling story so that you connect them to your photographic activity.

Your photographic elevator pitch must attract your interviewer. It must be driven by your passion.

Only a few photographers think about the elevator pitch.

Often you hear a few poorly prepared and inconsistent sentences.

The photographic elevator pitch is an excellent tool to guide you on the path to photographic creativity. It is different from your photographic why, which expresses the deep reasons why you chose photography for yourself. Your elevator pitch should make a statement that helps you to be different.

It is a clear, concise, and convincing argument that explains your photographic activity.

Take some time to write it down and learn it by heart. You will be surprised by the results.

You will not be shy anymore. You will notice that you feel empowered to dare to defend your cause and your photo activity.

 

Tip #18: Know How to Analyze Photos

Analyzing a photo consists in breaking it down into its various elements and then studying their relationships.

The aim is to detect the emotional meaning, the message transmitted or to bring out the aesthetic qualities.

For you, it is an essential act if you want to make your photos interesting to other people. You need to know how to analyze other people's photos, as well as your own.

Analyzing a photo is an objective act. Analyzing a photo is not judging it. If you know how to analyze photos correctly, you will develop and accentuate your personal qualities.

You will better define your artistic tastes. You will improve your photographic process. You will better limit your creativity. You will also better understand why you like some pictures and not others.

This is an essential step for you. If you want to know more about an analysis method I developed, I recommend this article I published.

4 Steps to Analyze a Nature Photograph.
 

Tip #19: Learn to Judge Photos

Judging a photo is giving your opinion. You will communicate your appreciation of your photos or those of others.

Judging can be an objective or subjective act. There are different ways to judge a photo. Each of them has its own evaluation grid.

Judging photos is an essential act for you. It is as natural as breathing. Being able to judge your photos allows you to know what your photos look like or are different from those of others.

It means understanding you better. If you know how to judge photos well, you will know how to criticize them better. Indeed, criticism is a consequence of judgment. You will refine your view of the way you construct your own photos.

I recommend that you always use the same evaluation grid to be consistent and coherent in your judgments. Knowing how to judge will allow you to become less intransigent and more indulgent. You will open new creative doors and explore new paths of inspiration.

If you want to know more about photographic judgment and evaluation grids, I recommend this article I published.

2 Methods for Judging a Photo.
 

Tip #20: Develop Your Photographic Intentionality

Photographic intentionality is created when you make a psychological connection between your photographic awareness and a photographic goal to achieve.

For example, if you want to shoot landscapes differently from other photographers and it remains an idea without action, you will never succeed in doing it.

On the other hand, if you have this idea in your head and start acting on it, then it will germinate, and you will encounter results with interesting photographs. You will have established a psychological link between a photographic goal to achieve and your photographic consciousness that tells you to be different. This is photographic intentionality. You have set up a virtual path that will allow you to make photographs.

Believe me, it is not as easy as it sounds. How many times have we all had ideas, but because we did not act, they remained without any concrete effect. It is a particularly important concept to succeed in standing out, in becoming audible, in creating different pictures.

In a previous article, I explained this concept of photographic intentionality. I invite you to read it.

3 Tips to Develop Your Photographic Intentionality.
 

Tip #21: Learn to Develop Your Photos

Photographers who think that it is not necessary and not useful to develop photos taken in the field are wrong.

Today, cameras have reached such a technical quality; photographers have reached such a technical mastery, that if you put 20 photographers in the same shooting situation, you will have a good chance to get 20 almost identical pictures of the scene.

Photo development with software and a computer is the only way to create different photos that look like you.

It is during this crucial step that you will modify your photo to bring the elements that qualify you. I am talking about white balance, cropping, contrast, brightness, highlights, textures, details, etc.

It is by learning to develop your photos that you will assert your photographic signature. You will reinforce your photographic approach.

Developing a photo is easy for those who know how to do so. Often in 30 or 45 minutes, it is possible to create a true artistic photo that will show our interpretation of the scene we have tried to capture.

But to achieve this result, you have to learn a lot and practice a lot. It will take a lot of time to achieve a satisfactory result. But it is the only way to create different photos that are interesting and audible. Developing photos allows us to not look like other photographers.

Developing a Photo Is an Essential Step for Excellence.
 

Finally

I hope these 21 tips for making your photos different and interesting will help you strengthen your photographic approach.

I apply these 21 tips every day in my activity as a professional photographer. I have listed them for you to help you progress.

These are tips that will give you tangible results for making different photos.

In my opinion, the most important thing is to create a strong photographic why and a clear photographic approach. These two elements are the basis for meaningful photography. Do not hesitate to spend time to define them, learn them by heart and to apply them every time you shoot in the field.

Be humble, patient, constant, persevering, and persistent because the road to excellence is long.

Define Your Photographic Approach to Create Interesting Photos

Black kite flying over a pond in La Dombes in France. Photograph by Amar Guillen in black and white.
Black kite flying over a pond in La Dombes in France in black and white.
 

Tip #7: Do Not Take Pictures for Everyone

If you are looking to take and make pictures and hope that everyone will like them, you will become simply average. You will no longer be audible and identifiable. You will not be able to stand out in the photographic hubbub or noise if you are trying to match the status quo and please everyone.

I think it is better to have a small, loyal audience of watchers or people who have faith in you than a huge group you know nothing about.

If you have a small audience, you have more constructive comments and feedback on your photos. You can improve them, make them more interesting. If you shoot for a large audience, you will not be able to create emotional, personal connections or you will feel like you do not have the time. You will fail to listen to your own inspirations.

Your photos will no longer be interesting. They will be average.

Personally, for my art photos, I have a reduced number of clients. I take care of them. I listen to them. I do not try to broadcast to as many people as possible, because I know that I will not be able to listen to everyone. I will not be able to satisfy all the expectations. Thus, I choose to focus on quality over quantity.

Make it a point to take care of the people who love your photos and appreciate your talent. You must hold them in high esteem. They are a treasure.

 

Tip #8: Always Strive for Photographic Excellence

Excellence is an eminent degree of quality, of value of someone or something in its kind.

I think that photographic excellence cannot be achieved. We strive for excellence, but we can always do better. Yet we must always try to achieve it.

Not only should we respect ourselves, but also, we should respect others' time and energy. When we take pictures and finalize them, we have to ask ourselves what we can improve for our next photo projects. We should always be thinking of our specific photographic audience.

For me, I use to think the search for excellence matched the words of Nicolas Boileau-Despréaux when he said:

Twenty times on the job, put your work back on-the-job - Polish it constantly and polish it again - Add sometimes and often erase.

I have often thought that this was the only way to create good photos. In fact, it is a waste of time. What interests an audience in our photos is the emotions that come out of them. Technique is secondary.

I wasted a lot of time doing and redoing over and over again. Now I have adopted the principle that what is done is done. I always learn from my mistakes. I try not to repeat them. I move on. This is the famous compound effect.

Add your little brick as each day passes. Make small but meaningful progress.

Striving for excellence and constantly seeking it means understanding one's mistakes, moving forward, and choosing not to repeat certain mistakes. You will find that your settings and product are not always the same each time, each new day brings forth a new challenge

If you do not strive for excellence, you will be average. Your photos will not be interesting. You will not stand out. You will not be identifiable in the photographic hubbub. This does not have to be your destiny, however.

 

Tip #9: Understand the Virtuous Circle of Photographic Creation

The virtuous principle of photographic creation is as follows:

  • You take pictures in the field.
  • You are enjoying yourself.
  • You are joyful and enthusiastic.
  • You feel satisfied.
  • You then show them to an audience.
  • You have comments and constructive remarks.
  • You are making a difference to your audience.
  • You feel proud because you feel that you are useful. Your photos are being used for something, for someone. They have a purpose.
  • Then, you go back to the field to take new pictures.

This virtuous principle of photography is an essential principle for me.

I found that when it broke, the photographers did not take any more pictures.

It implies that you should always edit your photos to get opinions from other people. This is the only way you can progress.

It also implies that your photos must be useful. They must help you or other people to live better, to move forward, to understand their existence. If you understand this virtuous circle of photographic creation, you will always be motivated to take pictures.

For me, it is a great principle for creating interesting and meaningful photos.

 

Tip #10: Define Your Photographic Approach

A photographic approach consists of the following two elements:

  • A photographic vision.
  • A photographic signature.

Photographic vision is the way you see the world around you.

The photographic signature is the way you show it.

After defining your photographic why, this is the most essential element of your photographic approach.

The right definition of your photographic process allows you to mark out the path of your creativity. It allows you to have solid reference points so that you never get lost in the way you create your photos. It is a guarantee that you will be consistent in the way you create your images. Not only does this bring forth efficiency, but it also constructs a constant and solid foundation on which you can expand your work.

I wrote and published an article on the photographic process. Click here to read it.

Why and How: Defining Your Photographic Statement to Improve Your Photos.
 

Tip #11: Develop Your Photographic Awareness

Your photographic awareness defines your ability to know where you stand in relation to other photographers.

I think this is an essential element if you want your photos to be interesting and meaningful. Indeed, if you know the styles and genres of photography that other photographers belong to, you will try to be different. You are not going to copy them, but you can become inspired by them.

If you take pictures that look like you, you will apply the principle of the virtuous circle of photographic creation. If you do not know yourself, how do you think you can distinguish yourself from other photographers? Do not be a copy. I recommend you to read the article I have published on this subject.

Why and How: Developing a Photographic Consciousness.
 

Tip #12: Create Your Photographic Identity

Your photographic identity gives you an existence in photography.

Defining it will allow you to say who you are, what you want to be, and how you want to be perceived.

Defining your photographic identity allows you to list all the data that will individualize your photographic approach. It is comparable to your administrative identity.

If your photographic identity is strong, your photos will become different, because they will be like you. You give them meaning: the meaning you want.

Your photographic series will become consistent and coherent. You do not spread yourself too thin. You concentrate on precise objectives.

I have published an article on this subject as well. Click here to read it.

Why You Should Define Your Photographic Identity.
 

Tip #13: Develop Your Photographic Intelligence

Photographic intelligence allows you to adapt to the needs and behaviors of the people who look at your photos. If you want to create photos that are attention-grabbing, meaningful, and interesting, you need to understand how your audience sees and reacts.

You need to adapt and choose photographic tools or techniques that allow you to make the photos your audience expects while maintaining your values.

You will probably think that I am talking about marketing and sales actions. This is not the case. I am helping you to create your legacy. Never forget that the important thing is the virtuous circle of photography. If you only create photos for yourself, they will not interest others. Eventually, you will stop all photographic activity because you will not see the point. We all need recognition. We are social animals that long to be seen, appreciated, and heard.

This is why you need to develop your photographic intelligence. I have published a detailed article on this subject.

4 Tips for Developing Your Own Unique Photographic Intelligence.
 

Tip #14: Develop Your Photographic Culture

You probably know that the appreciation and understanding of a photo by a viewer is above all an emotional act. It is this act that will dominate the judgment.

When you create your photos, I recommend that you always think about the emotional act. You need to add photographic elements that will spark connections.

Let us say that your photos attract attention. But do they induce emotions? In order to do this, you must have a grasp of photographic culture. You need to have a photographic culture to expertly mix the ingredients that will touch your audience. You have to create symbolic photos that attract and hold the attention of the people who will look at them.

I have published an article explaining how to do it. Click here to read it.

Your General Culture Is an Asset to Create Interesting Photos.
 

Tip #15: Learn to Master the Language of Photography

Photography is an art form in its own right. Photography is a means of expression. It allows you to express your emotions, transmit your messages.

To express yourself, you need to know and master the language of photography. The language of writing is a series of symbols that allows you to signify something concrete.

Mastering these symbols is essential to communicate with others.

Here is a non-exhaustive list of visual symbols used in photography:

  • Lines.
  • Shapes.
  • Masses
  • Textures
  • etc.

These are just a few, there are more symbols you may encounter. Knowing them and knowing how to use them will allow you to write photographically and be audible to your audience. I have published an article detailing the different steps to use photography language. Click here to discover it.

Why and How Speaking in the Language of Photography.

Tip #16: Master the Photographic Writing

  1. 21 Essential Tips to Improve Your Photos and Make Them Interesting
  2. Using Photography to Communicate
  3. Classifying Genres of Photographers to Better Situate Yourself In Your Style
  4. 5 Ideas for Ranking the Genres of Photographers

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About Amar Guillen, Creator of Fine Art Prints of Nature
As a photographer capturing the artistic essence for several decades, I have mastered the art of crafting an authentic experience for art enthusiasts and collectors of visual art.
When I observe my surroundings, be it friends, family, relationships, or professional contacts, I see souls in perpetual motion. Every moment of their existence is engulfed by daily hassles, work concerns, social media, online or televised information streams, and videos on the web.
Every minute, they strive to accomplish something, fearing losing ground and feeling marginalized in this frenzied society. Imprisoned by an oppressive schedule, the essential eludes them, drowned in the tumult of daily life. Is it really crucial to watch yet another cat video on the internet? Is it necessary to post twenty daily messages on social media?
Despite this, they remain constantly stressed and anxious about the challenges of the world, without being able to influence these monumental problems. It is at this moment that my artistic nature photographs come into play. Those who have had the privilege of hanging one of my works in their personal or professional space have expressed a radical transformation in their lives.
Every day, contemplating these works of art immerses them in tranquility, inner peace, and rediscovered serenity. They then understand that nature has the power to unravel tensions, to encourage reflection on the essential. Artistic photographs thus become open windows to the wonders of nature.
I have chosen to share the best of myself by helping others discover their identity, personality, style, all while reconnecting with nature. Take the time to explore my artistic photographs if you wish to reveal your true essence. Once hung in your space, your view of the world will be transformed.
Amar Guillen is a creator of fine art prints of nature.
I am Amar Guillen, creator of nature art photographs. I have a deep conviction that contemplating nature has the power to transform human beings. If everyone learned to know, respect, and preserve nature, our world would be transformed into a haven of peace where everyone would find their place.
Copyright © 2003 - 2026 Guillen Photo LLC - All rights reserved. Amar Guillen, professional photographer since 2003.
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