About a decade ago I used to have a Flickr account, and the fact that Flickr was a website originally built for desktop screens gave every photo its right space and size, embedded in a relaxing UI, without erratic scrolling and liking (Flick's "like" functionality was never as addictive as Instagram's).
I also used to have a Lomo film camera which I would take everywhere. I really liked the film developing process, having to wait for the photos (digital cameras we already prevalent of course), then uploading them to Flickr, always also printing the photos, knowing that they would remain somewhere even if the website would be taken down some day. The Flickr account is still active, and from time to time I like to visit it, and each time I'm surprised that the website still exists and that their interface is still pleasent and relaxing to use, despite recent redesigns.
People dismissing these memories as nostalgia ignore the fact that smartphones had a profound impact on the way everything behaves. Instagram is not simply a "mobile Flickr", it's something profoundly different.
Instagram could be use as a “snapshot” of the real thing. If I were a photographer I would use it to hook folks into browsing the full version on my website (and buy prints if they’d like).
The fact is, with huge DPI densities of photos the best way to view something is a very high quality print at scale.
Real life > Flickr > Instagram (in terms of visual quality). The limitations of canvas form factor is a huge damper on visual arts. A square canvas is VERY different than a rectangular one, or a hexagonal one.
But the humble square is perfect for instant grammification.
I'm a photographer on the side and I doubt many people end up on my site from Instagram: the funnel is just too awkward. I mostly found selling prints to be a bit of a waste of time - high touch, low return. Instead, I focus almost entirely on government entities or reasonably sized operators who will commission projects. I've had more commissioned projects than I've ever sold prints, and the former pay x0 times as much and are far more fun and interesting. But where your first point works is that in that mode, you don't need a lot of people visiting your site and getting in touch, you just need the few, right people.
Met a photographer the other day who said he sold about three prints a week, with a margin per print of $150 (after framing, shipping, etc). A day rate for a commissioned job is likely to be $1-2k.
Flickr and their ilk is where you meet other photographers. Instagram is where you get in front of people with photography budgets, IMO.
I don't think many are putting squares on Instagram - it's almost all 4x5 in the main feed or 9x16 in Stories. Whatever fills more of the screen, at least in my industry.
However, I shoot a lot of panoramas^ and resent that Instagram is such a terrible place to show them!
Have you tried 360 photography / meshing? It may allow for those gorgeous long image to fit on mobile better, not really sure. I've been toying with pannellum[1] , and displaying 360 mesh's, its fairly good on mobile. [2]
No, never tried it. Some people split panoramas into multiple photos that people then swipe through, but that's awkward if the initial shot doesn't hold its own when viewed in isolation. Another option is rendering it out as a panning video, which I could try but haven't yet bothered.
However, my work increasingly shifts from photos towards video as that's where the demand/money appears to be. So I shoot loads of panoramas and then they just sit there unless someone licenses them.
Not very well. For a long time, I struggled to focus on one thing, and eventually gave in to just do everything I wanted to do. There are definitely pros and cons, and I certainly neglect many of my projects. But it's making for an interesting life.
Flying a drone and taking photos seems very disconnected to photography for me. But that's just me. The photos are great however. But it feels like a "photographer" who also just uses their phone.
Seems like a pretty arbitrary line to draw, especially phone vs camera. Modern cameras have software assisting too. Strikes me as gatekeeping, but you're welcome to your opinion.
I had two jobs last year shooting video for my country's national tourism authority - I shot half with my phone, and half with a tiny gimbal camera (Osmo Pocket) that uses the phone as the monitor/display/interface. I got paid, got two holidays, and the content went out to several million people. I'm perfectly OK with being someone who (amongst multiple cameras, four drones, etc) "also just uses their phone". :)
Don't worry. I'm definitely on the fence with this.
I am not the kind of anti-software purist. But I am definitely against fake elements in a photo, which there are more than plenty in Instagram and other photo sharing platforms.
>A square canvas is VERY different than a rectangular one
I agree and I'm very much used to a ~35mm aspect ratio. That said, medium format film (120/220) was usually approximately square so it's not an objectively "bad" aspect ratio.
Instagram has stopped using square dimensions for a long time. In fact if you want to lose followers, you should maintain your photography dimensions and scale. If you don't post in "iPhone portrait" mode, you will soon disappear from the algorithm.
I take most of my photos with a real camera. I'd love to share them on Instagram but Instagram has no UI whereby you can upload photos on the web; you have to transfer the photos to your phone first. Which is asinine.
Or at least that's the way it was a few years ago when I looked into IG and gave up on it. Maybe it's changed, but it clearly doesn't cater to people with real cameras.
Not an Instagram user myself, but a trick I've picked up regarding Instagram on the desktop: Go to the developer tools of your browser and select a mobile view (in the responsive view options) – and there you are, on the mobile skin, including upload.
Note: Uploads through this method will be reduced in quality, SUBSTANTIALLY compared to those uploaded on phones. The entire workflow of Instagram for PC is inferior from an objective quality point of view.
You can use Later to schedule and ease that process, in a way. I tried it for a while and there were benefits. Likely to work if you are posting from a catalogue of folio shots and not time-sensitive shots pertaining to particular outings you've had.
The camera obscura or one of the horrible modern DSLRs? \s
Always love when people that don't get modern tech start with the gate keeping. iPhone produce better pictures by themselves than 90% of all the "real camera" people with their $5000 Canons.
Have I missed some new feature? My iPhone just sits on the table until I pick it up and do something with it.
Modern phones are very capable cameras. I always have mine with me and, especially in non-challenging conditions (light/focal length/etc.) one can take very good photos with it. I use it a lot. But it's ludicrous to suggest that it's more capable than purpose built devices with much bigger sensors and much bigger lenses.
(That said, if you're someone who shoots with a DSLR on full auto and never has taken your kit lens off the camera, you should probably just stick with your phone. It's easier.)
Not even closer... anybody can try to zoom a photo made with a phone and see the blurred mess in saturated tones "fixed for you" by the machine. Definition is a joke by comparison.
Is just a toy added to a phone. Not more, not less.
I love taking photos. But I only take photos for my own enjoyment: not to share with anyone, and not to get any feedback. I only have an instagram because friends in real life have begged me to get one so they can actually see the photos I take with them.
No, I take photos for my own enjoyment, and I can recommend the following:
- set a photo you have taken as your phone background, or rotate through a folder of them[0]
- do the same for your computer wallpaper
- buy some frames and stick your photos in, change them every few months
You'll now enjoy taking photos for the joy of taking photos, and when you look at them you'll remember the day out or the holiday you were on... not be thinking about whether anyone else likes them.
[0]I actually have an Lightroom export folder set at my phone resolution that I can adb sync to my phone, it works a treat
I share the photos I make with my wife and daughter but, otherwise they're just for me. My wife used some of the photos with various printing services to make physical articles that we interact with and that increased my enjoyment of the photos even more. I really like interacting with the photos I make as physical articles.
She had a couple of coffee mugs made with collages of family pictures. I get a kick out of seeing the photos each time I wash them.
She also surprised us with a "memory" card game made with 24 photos from family trips and gatherings. It made a simple game into a conversation about the people, places, and occasions in the photos.
She also had a tote bag printed with a larger-than-life print of a photo of my daughter's face om it. There's something particularly surreal, to me, about having an article like that with the face of somebody you know on it. It also, of course, prompted me to immediately photograph my daughter carrying the bag... >smile<
Where do you suggest printing photos? I'm in the same boat: I make creative works for myself and don't use social media. However I am totally new to photography and the only way I've printed so far is via the app at CVS.
I can't get away from somewhere wanting to get a reaction from someone else, I think. It shouldn't really be that many and on a social platform though.
You started young; please continue with your adventure and stop using social media or at least those that affect your creativity.
Spend more time with yourself and your camera, seek for quiet times and places, and take as many pictures as possible.
Photography can be like a good book that captivates your imagination; master your craft and eventually you will become a story-teller through your photographs.
Yeah for sure. I'm sad it took me so long to realize what was happening. Still have a very hard time picking up my camera. Taking pictures with my phone is easier. Maybe I should post more unsplash. Those that are there are just for testing, hundreds more on instagram, but I like the idea of sharing for free with the world.
Sharing widely is great, but to develop as a photographer, it can be a lot more rewarding to take an in-person workshop class. In a well-run workshop, you can get thoughtful critiques, find fellow students whose opinions you value, and learn about your own priorities by contrast with the other students' styles. For me, it also helps keep the emphasis on developing your own craft -- just launching images into the internet can't help but feel like participating in an awful global popularity contest.
I've noticed Instagram users develop anxiety about posting (including a full-time Instagrammer who started turning down lucrative offers and gave it up).
I'll sound like a shill after mentioning it in another comment, but you could try Later.com as a way to insulate yourself from that process. Take photos. Throw them into the queue. Let Later post them, and just ignore the metrics unless you want to be responding to comments.
I take loads of photos and then hardly share them for fear of a shot not being good enough. It's definitely a thing that grew noticeably with Instagram.
Instagram has ruined much more than just photography. World heritage sites, national parks, scenic overlooks. People just “do it for the gram”. Don’t get me started on the social problems it has caused as well.
I’ve always enjoyed taking photos, but much of the enjoyment has come from having other people see and appreciate them.
FB & Instagram reduced time between taking a photo and having people see it, and there have been times where I posted particular photos because I knew they’d get more upvotes, not because they were photos I particularly treasured.
Though I blame FB & Instagram for a lot, I don’t entirely blame them for my change in behaviour. A decade and a half prior, Flickr had the same basic dynamic. People posted photos with tags, others upvoted them. A feed displayed popular posts. The difference is with the device. Looking at a photo that’s physically smaller than a real-life Polaroid isn’t a massively pleasurable experience, so to compensate the photo needs to go further with its content — closer crops etc. I also end up seeing more imagery, because each viewing is sort of throwaway, than I did using Flickr. I don’t blame IG for that either, even though it clearly benefits them.
I think this speaks to a general principle: you can democratize access to consumer attention (whether that's in editorializing, photography, music, what have you) but doing so forms more of a truly free market.
And truly free markets distort themselves, because people seek multiple things when producing stuff for their peers. If there are exploits, they'll tend to win… and there are always exploits. We're not truly rational in the manner of computers (to the extent even they can be said to be rational…)
The only way to really avoid this is to define other kinds of values or purposes, and then stubbornly pursue those instead of attention. Which makes you rather a pariah in the modern internet economy… it's pretty weird.
There is a 'market' for this, too, though. It's just more of a niche market, but if you signal to that smaller market it does hear. I don't do this as much in art but I do it in other areas, and it's real. (meaning: I don't really HAVE any audience in art, but there are places where I do)
To do this in photography, define something you want to pursue outside of just 'audience response writ large', and refuse to pay attention to anything else: in particular, be able to identify when there's an audience demand that's steering you away from the value you're pursuing, and be prepared to reject the sort of audience that's asking you to go against your own wishes. By rejecting one audience you're signaling to another (often this happens quietly and you only find out about it later, or not at all, where the rejected ones WILL be loud and offended about it: be brave)
That will work, so long as you're able to define something about the art that drives you, that's more than 'people seem to like it'. Your job is to be telling the AUDIENCE what to like, knowing full well that lots of them will disagree and be mad :)
This is a great example of why I support the electoral college and don't think democracy always works. The fact that people aren't rational, as you said, allows for self-harm or outright self-destruction in some cases when people are given too much freedom.
So what is the main difference between Instagram and something like Flickr? They are both social sites/apps that revolve around photographs. But Flickr always seemed more about photography and less about selfies/influencers/likes/etc…
Maybe the author would be better served by a community closer to Flickr than Instagram? It’s no longer as popular, but for the purposes of sharing photos with the world, maybe it’s a better fit? Instead of giving up photography, the author might want to think more about why they got started in the first place. It probably wasn’t to get likes. So maybe there is a different way… or different community that would be a better fit for what they want to accomplish.
I've always low key expected for some kind of startup that used the generic photography portofolio (the one where all images are laid out in an infinite horizontal "scroll") + user accounts and sharing. Hasn't really happened.
When you think about it , all social media is about a feed that is vertical (top to bottom) and smartphone screen oriented which is the opposite of standard photo formats. Doesn't even work for most of the old square formats.
Original community I guess. Flickr was more geared towards pros and amateurs (in the original sense). Instagram was made specifically for iPhone users.
Of course you'll find no shortage of people who will opine that "Flickr could have been Instagram." Which is probably true from a financial perspective I guess. But doing anything along those lines would probably have been fundamentally incompatible with its original purpose. It's OK to be a niche however un-Silicon Valley that is.
> Both as a cautionary tale to anyone getting into photography, and as an explanation for why I stopped.
I think "cautionary tale" is a bit hyperbolic. It seems to me that the author's motivations for getting into photography and expectations of what it would bring to his life have as much if not more to do with his experience than Instagram.
If you get into photography for the purpose of garnering attention and praise from others, rather than, say, telling stories you find important/interesting or chronicling your experiences visually, your odds of being disappointed are incredibly high. Everyone is a photographer these days thanks the camera we all carry in our pockets and as a result the supply of photos far exceeds the demand.
Note that this is not to say that Instagram hasn't had a negative impact on photography. As an avid traveler, I think it's both sad and amusing that people take basically the same photos of high-profile tourist sites to post on Instagram. But of course that shouldn't discourage anyone from taking photos when they travel if they really enjoy doing it, which is probably the only good reason for the average person to take photos anyway.
I started doing it purely for fun and intrisic interest. Instgram slowly shifted my motivation to something that aligns more with their goals without me realizing.
> What I didn’t know was that for each new like and follow, a little dopamine was sent out into my brain. Every little bit of attention was a hit of a drug I didn't know about. After a while, you get used to it—wanting more and setting ever higher standards for yourself.
The line between agency and no agency is quite blurry. But I would say keeping up a pretense of agency is useful, even if only fictional.
Are you sure about that? From reading your post, I get the impression you made your Instagram account public and started tagging your photos because you wanted larger numbers of people to see your photos.
In any case, I hope you can get back to photography and truly enjoy it. One suggestion is to see if there are local photography groups in your area, or groups for things you like to photograph (i.e. birds, etc.). These can offer great close-knit environments to share your photography and get constructive feedback, and to enjoy the photography of people you can have a connection with. Trying to get random strangers to tap a heart next to your photos is a soul-less pursuit.
Which is why this page where the photographer pointed his camera "the wrong way" is a lot more novel—and dare I say, interesting—than attempts at recreating postcard views.
I never had an instagram account and nerver used it until recently. I had to create and use one for a project I am working on. I was sadden by how generic most of the photo on the service are. Most of them are either black and white with slightly pushed contrast, or high contrast with a shift to either red or blue. Now those are common photo practice but instagram seems to have really standardized them (I guess the filters have a lot to do with that) in a way that make every photo look like the next one. And when there is a human subject, they tend to always use the same kind of "sensual" pose that you could find on the cover of a fashion magazine.
I am definitely sure that in this service use by millions of people there way more originality and diversity than that, but holy molly do Instagram tend to push those very generic profile down your throat and give very little visibility to original content. But I guess thats the issue with anything popular, it tend to aggregate around the most common denominator.
I've been using Instagram since around 2012. It started as an easy way for me to share some nice photos and captions of my everyday life with distant friends and family. Lately all I really see on Instagram is cheap content-farm posts, and my closests friends and family have left Instagram and don't see my posts anymore, so I've been using it less as well. I've got the email addresses of my closest contacts, so I've considered sending a monthly or quarterly email update to them instead. The biggest thing I miss from Instagram is the ability to quickly edit a mediocre photo and make it a little prettier. It would also be nice to be able to create updates spontaneously and have them batched and only sent out quarterly. This is all possible right now, but the workflow to make it happen has too much friction, so when it comes down to it, I don't end up sending these updates at all.
> Soon, I started thinking about how my photos would be perceived even before taking them.
This was a bit sad. Of course, Instagram isn't the problem. The best creative people have always created work to please themselves. They do not really care about like mechanics and peak times to post.
I hope this guy eventually takes responsibility and comes to terms with some of his insecurities. There obviously was a spark that drew him to photography, but it seems he has psyched himself out along the way.
You can replace Instagram with any other social media platform and photography with any other activity, and the post would ring true all the same. What the author describes is exactly what happened to me after I picked music discovery as a hobby and started sharing my findings on Reddit. I am very familiar with every trick to game the system for more likes (well, upvotes in my case) mentioned in the article. I quit cold turkey when I realized what this does to my hobby, but not before I was so burned out, I temporarily stopped listening to any kind of music.
For me, the likes on Instagram were the initial spark that encouraged me to persist with my photography and eventually made it a viable job. But I resent it now and would rather post with minimal feedback on likes/views/etc.
Author need find purpose of taking pictures. If he doing it just for faceless audience, he'll never get into creative process of photography. Finding alternative social network like Twitter for picture sharing is pointless.
As pro photographer I personally find out that following other photographers won't help me with improvement, it actually shape my work to mainstream. So only place where I decided to put my work is my personal portfolio. I don't care about hashtags, I don't care about how much people like it or not. I just create what I like and talk about my work with others personally. My mind is much more focused on actual creativity then thinking about how others would like it or not.
Can you focus on making sure your contribution to the platform/everywhere is what you want to see more of. If you resent the whole tag game, just ignore it. Post photos and forget the game.
It's funny I've really slowed down on taking still photos ever since my kids were born and I've gotten really stingy with my time for any recreation or hobbies.
For the purposes of "remembering what the kids were like when they were young and being able to tell them about what they were like and the things we did together", the highest return on effort I've found is from taking a couple of 30-60 second videos daily.
I have a similar mindset. I never shared photos before anyway, outside of siblings and parents. But I prefer seeing photos of people on their trips and whatnot when I visit their home.
I see absolutely no point in having a 24/7 feed of other people’s leisure (or non leisure) activities. It kind of makes visiting (or even audio/video calling) others more fun since you already know there is stuff to see or discuss that you have not already disseminated.
Sounds like his photos were incredibly dear to him. I'd love to see his photos. :) Anyhow, I hope he gets back into it, perhaps with a different mindset towards sharing on social media. At end of the day, it shouldn't be about numbers, it should be simply because you love your work and you love to share with the world.
TinyBeans [0] is the ideal photo sharing app for me & my family. It is totally focused on empowering you to (1) build a chronological feed of good photos and videos and (2) share it with a tightly controlled group of people.
TinyBeans really helped my parents stay connected to their grandkids during the COVID lock downs. We're still using it as things open up because it gives me all the goodness of sharing baby pictures with none of the creepiness of social media. As a bonus, it also acts as a traditional photo book, archiving all our family photos in a searchable way. I pay for it, so I know I'm the customer and not the product.
Instagram also ruined Photography for me. I've asked countless times in many locations if there is a place for good photography to be exhibited and criticized but most people have no solution.
I think Photography (the real kind, with minimal edits and realistic captures) is fading away and this Instagram photography style is replacing it.
Fake everything, all the way down.
The problem is, most photo sharing platforms are too susceptible to theft of property, or they're too susceptible to very bad quality photography.
While the OP's case is somewhat Instagram-specific, people also just get burned out of hobbies. I was very seriously into photography in school, editor of various school pubs, etc. After I graduated I really just shifted to taking slides on vacation for quite a few years. It was really only after digital came in that I did photography more seriously again--and, even then, still mostly when traveling (which is normally a lot of the time).
Every once in a while I think about whether I should sell all my photo equipment. I got a Fuji S5 Pro, some flashes, stuff like that, nothing fancy. Really loved using all of it before I went to study and work afterwards, so pre-2015.
These days I'm fascinated by the quality of my smartphone camera and haven't touched the Fuji for years (ok, took a dozen profile pictures last year, doesn't really count for me).
I feel like I've "burned out" on that hobby and should probably free the space in the cabinet by selling everything.
Smartphones are pretty good for a lot of people and, truth be told, I probably use mine more than my other gear.
I have a pretty big Canon EOS system that had its start back in film days although it's a not-current FF digital body now. I mostly use it for events where the lighting isn't as good or where I want a longer or wider lens. But it honestly doesn't see a lot of use. I've thought of selling the whole thing but there are times I would miss it so I haven't.
I also have a Fujifilm X-E3 with a few lenses which is my go to for travel when I'm not just going to shoot some casual shots with my phone.
While I will share "snapshots" from my phone, I do like to periodically go in, add metadata, curate, lightly edit, organize, etc. photos in Lightroom. It's pretty much the only way to access them in a reasonable way a few years later.
I use the Apple Lightning to USB dongle to attach my camera to my phone and then edit the photos in Darkroom to be able to quickly share with others the photos I just took. The hassle of memory cards and sorting happens later.
Every time I take a photo with my phone I'm disappointed with the result. I'd almost prefer a camera-less phone so I'd be forced to take a proper camera with me.
Faking interest sounds like a great tactic! Is there a book about these? I suspect marketing graduates should learn these tactics during their studies.
I've managed high follower (100K+), high engagement (3%+) accounts with 99% distinct human followers, and I can tell you that there is no prize for likes.
It doesn't matter if your photo is getting 10 likes or 3500 likes, dozens of comments and reshares. It just becomes related to relative performance of the other post.
So you shouldn't use instagram for that.
Also, you should know that hashtags are not competitive at all for many years now, there is practically zero utility in using them at this point and you should only use them for irony or an extended caption, as they can convey your thoughts without a sentence, you're welcome. Although you can still game hashtags, but even then it is just good for balancing out attrition of followers and maintaining an account size, as opposed to actually growing the account.
Going back to the main subject, you can use the overall engagement as a resource to acquire other goods and services though, like a currency that is never spent. People, brands will associate and do things for you for free (or with you, for free) because of the dream of your engagement, analogous to why the same brands and people gamble on ads with all the large tech conglomerates, a potential well of engagement. But you are just the dealer building inventory, and dealers know not to get high on their own supply so you shouldn't either. So by realizing there is no prize offered by the platform, no achievement unlocked, not even a digital sticker, you can short circuit the dopamine hits.
At the scale you are talking about, 700 followers, hashtags can somewhat help with discovery. But they are practically irrelevant to other ways. Yeah, actually I stand by my first statement, the other ways are too relevant to really harp about hashtags. You're better off just commenting on other people's popular posts and asking for passerbys to look at your profile than spamming hashtags or trying to find a trending ones etc.
But unless you are in the business of growing profiles for other people, you shouldn't use instagram for trying to gain ever growing exposure as the dopamine is dangerous.
I don't have any solution for making that part of your visual arts display interest.
If you tried again, you should go back to private or even keep it public only as a portfolio to show people in person. Or to show an identity when you are communicating with a potential romantic partner over the messaging system.
In my category (tourism content), specific hashtags or tagging accounts is a way to get on the radar of target clients. But I'd agree that other than that, it does little but attract followers that are barely relevant to your cause - not in your locale, not legitimately interested in your content, not spending money in your field, etc.
And ultimately the right sort of content is what will count anyway. The best player in my industry/locale doesn't load up on hashtags now that he's on the right radars, he just makes great stuff.
This experience was part of what triggered a real depression for me but I feel you. I found that reducing friction as much as possible helps. Nowadays, if I take a photo, its whith my phone. The quality isn't as high, but there is almost no commitment.
It looks like Instagram is actually not about photography. Meaning that photography enthusiasts are at a disadvantage there. I’m surprised that I’m realizing this just now.
the people at https://glass.photo/ seem to be coming from a similar background and are trying a new (paid) approach towards photographer centric network. I hope it works out in the long term as I understand your frustration with photo sharing options for people who enjoy photography but don’t want it to become about the metrics
It is not only Instagram to blame. It started with camera manufacturers marketing towards the semi-pro wannabe and GAS crowd, than moved towards semantic groups in Flicker, than smartphones introduced computational exposure and easy way of taking photos and all of this culminated in Instagram Influencers and Filters.
The UX of Instagram is created by default to serve the normies as an outlet of vanity and virtue signaling.
The idea that social network has no option of uploading from desktop (unless using webdev browser mode) is absurd and clear design dark pattern.
Sometimes I wonder what goes in the minds of the devs who knowingly work on these User-hostile features. Project managers are one thing, but don't you have the integrity to refuse to work on such things?
I also used to have a Lomo film camera which I would take everywhere. I really liked the film developing process, having to wait for the photos (digital cameras we already prevalent of course), then uploading them to Flickr, always also printing the photos, knowing that they would remain somewhere even if the website would be taken down some day. The Flickr account is still active, and from time to time I like to visit it, and each time I'm surprised that the website still exists and that their interface is still pleasent and relaxing to use, despite recent redesigns.
People dismissing these memories as nostalgia ignore the fact that smartphones had a profound impact on the way everything behaves. Instagram is not simply a "mobile Flickr", it's something profoundly different.