Thank you for taking the time to do this; I wish I had had people like you when I was starting out. Hey, at least I found you and am now learning a lot from your guides. your are the best.
What I ‘missed’ was a clearer answer for the people that reply ‘no’ to questions 1 and 2, and consider themselves to be intuitive rather than ‘bonkers technical’ in response to the third question. People like myself. For what it is worth: for now, this has brought me to a form of documentary/journalism style of photography. Working alone, small kit, no posing, on location. Ironically, this landed me wedding gigs and commercial extreme sports photography shootings because I have apparently developed this natural feeling of being in the right moment at the right place with my camera, without having to orchestrate or being intrusive to the event. All that being said, I learned loads in the SLR wedding photography courses that can be applied to so many different genres as well. Therefore I strongly believe that a course like the Fstopper one can be an awesome tool for anyone, not matter your genre or style. Having extra knowledge in your camerabag is never a bad thing. Cheers!
I was thinking the same. As more intuative than technical, I feel like I thrive in small teams but can easily feel overly stimulated by short deadlines and large teams/crowds. So I've been attracted to outdoor portraits & street photography.
Nice post. I'm not the greatest people person, especially as I have been an engineer most of my life, but have taken several successful weddings, an in store beauty campaign and more recently sports portraiture. Everyone can change and needs to experience different social events so they can say yes or no to the "did I enjoy that" question. For me I find landscapes dull, city scapes interesting but a bit false, and the fashion shoots hideous as the models are told to look bored. So I love environmental portraits, architectural shots with purpose, and fashion with a fun element. Even though I used to be an extremely easy going, relaxed person, don't get me started on nature photography 😂
Great and very well said advice and guidance! Thanks you so much for this wisdom and pointers for us to improve our craft.. and thr most important of what you said is “ not be to Money driven” , be good on what you practice and do , then “fruits of your labor will compensate you”
Great info and you're exactly right about the combination of skills/personality and the types of jobs. I enjoy the high pressure of weddings, runway photography and similar productions. Sometimes I also like to slow down and enjoy product or landscape photography as well.
Had to search for this topic cuz no idea what I’m doing with my photography ‘career passion’. I currently have a full-time job at a casino (not taking pictures) and want to go full-on with photography, well maybe gradually. The first camera I did portraits and some birthdays/small wedding anniversaries. Upgraded my camera and realized I like street photography and being in nature with landscape photography. Now made a website that focuses on Portraits, Family photos and event photography wtf 😅. I clearly have no idea what I want. I did portraits for the money but not a people person. I’m probably gna cancel my website and focus on street and landscape. This is ridiculous ahhahaha
Wonderful advice and conversation Pye. I tried to photograph a make-up line. OMG that was the worst for me. 20 lipsticks and 30 brushes. It was painful to try product photos. Make up is one of the most difficult items to photograph cause the client wants to show the real colors of their lipsticks and the wrong lighting set up will male them look way different. Took me 15 days to be able to do this. 😕 I quit! Sticking to Families and children 💓 Small XVras and weddings. I work solo. I dont know how to create a team. How to be the leader of such team.
Hello Pye. That was a very important video, touched types of thoughts I have with myself several times while trying to decide what genre of photography I should focus on more and often. I'd love if you could bring this discussion further, maybe 1 or 2 more videos with deeper analysis, suggestions, recommendations, guidance, tips, whatever etc lol. Thanks bunch !!!
@@payamjirsa That's a good question but, I think you started a conversation that other professional UA-cam photographers are not exploring yet and that many beginner photographers either seek to have or would greatly benefit from having it. Maybe somehow make it more interactive so we can have a broader and more inclusive discussion, exploring both sides of the types of personalities. Me, for example, I'd like to do a wedding event, just for the $$, but definitely prefer wildlife, macro, landscape, possibly product and portrait or boudoir, only if working with a very selective and small team, of alone in the case of outdoor/nature photography. You can see on my IG account at photos.by.monty that I'm still looking to define what genre I identify myself with. Many others on Instagram are the same way or even worse. Anyway, I think that the topic of this video was an EXCELLENT choice and that deserves more development. Thanks Pye !!
Thank you so much for this great Video... I have just bought your awesome two courses in the creative platform but this video helps me a lot... thank you so much again... greetings from Venice Italy
Great video! I would really love to be able to photograph products at home as a professional, right now I just create my own setups for stock photography.
Check out Fstoppers' New Course: The Well Rounded Photographer ► bit.ly/3wd4pTI
I love your explanation!! Thank you, I admire your work .
Thank you for taking the time to do this; I wish I had had people like you when I was starting out. Hey, at least I found you and am now learning a lot from your guides. your are the best.
What I ‘missed’ was a clearer answer for the people that reply ‘no’ to questions 1 and 2, and consider themselves to be intuitive rather than ‘bonkers technical’ in response to the third question. People like myself.
For what it is worth: for now, this has brought me to a form of documentary/journalism style of photography. Working alone, small kit, no posing, on location. Ironically, this landed me wedding gigs and commercial extreme sports photography shootings because I have apparently developed this natural feeling of being in the right moment at the right place with my camera, without having to orchestrate or being intrusive to the event.
All that being said, I learned loads in the SLR wedding photography courses that can be applied to so many different genres as well. Therefore I strongly believe that a course like the Fstopper one can be an awesome tool for anyone, not matter your genre or style. Having extra knowledge in your camerabag is never a bad thing.
Cheers!
I was thinking the same.
As more intuative than technical, I feel like I thrive in small teams but can easily feel overly stimulated by short deadlines and large teams/crowds.
So I've been attracted to outdoor portraits & street photography.
Nice post. I'm not the greatest people person, especially as I have been an engineer most of my life, but have taken several successful weddings, an in store beauty campaign and more recently sports portraiture. Everyone can change and needs to experience different social events so they can say yes or no to the "did I enjoy that" question. For me I find landscapes dull, city scapes interesting but a bit false, and the fashion shoots hideous as the models are told to look bored. So I love environmental portraits, architectural shots with purpose, and fashion with a fun element. Even though I used to be an extremely easy going, relaxed person, don't get me started on nature photography 😂
Great and very well said advice and guidance! Thanks you so much for this wisdom and pointers for us to improve our craft.. and thr most important of what you said is “ not be to Money driven” , be good on what you practice and do , then “fruits of your labor will compensate you”
Excellent video, very good analysis of what is required to succeed and be happy in various genres of photography. Thank you
Great info and you're exactly right about the combination of skills/personality and the types of jobs.
I enjoy the high pressure of weddings, runway photography and similar productions. Sometimes I also like to slow down and enjoy product or landscape photography as well.
Glad you enjoyed!
I had a while looking for a tutorial on this topic. Thank you!
Had to search for this topic cuz no idea what I’m doing with my photography ‘career passion’. I currently have a full-time job at a casino (not taking pictures) and want to go full-on with photography, well maybe gradually.
The first camera I did portraits and some birthdays/small wedding anniversaries. Upgraded my camera and realized I like street photography and being in nature with landscape photography.
Now made a website that focuses on Portraits, Family photos and event photography wtf 😅.
I clearly have no idea what I want. I did portraits for the money but not a people person. I’m probably gna cancel my website and focus on street and landscape. This is ridiculous ahhahaha
Wonderful advice and conversation Pye.
I tried to photograph a make-up line. OMG that was the worst for me. 20 lipsticks and 30 brushes.
It was painful to try product photos. Make up is one of the most difficult items to photograph cause the client wants to show the real colors of their lipsticks and the wrong lighting set up will male them look way different. Took me 15 days to be able to do this. 😕 I quit!
Sticking to Families and children 💓 Small XVras and weddings.
I work solo. I dont know how to create a team. How to be the leader of such team.
Thanks for this. You're a true pro.
TY!
Hello Pye. That was a very important video, touched types of thoughts I have with myself several times while trying to decide what genre of photography I should focus on more and often. I'd love if you could bring this discussion further, maybe 1 or 2 more videos with deeper analysis, suggestions, recommendations, guidance, tips, whatever etc lol. Thanks bunch !!!
Glad it was helpful. What would you like me to analyze in parts 2 and 3?
@@payamjirsa That's a good question but, I think you started a conversation that other professional UA-cam photographers are not exploring yet and that many beginner photographers either seek to have or would greatly benefit from having it. Maybe somehow make it more interactive so we can have a broader and more inclusive discussion, exploring both sides of the types of personalities. Me, for example, I'd like to do a wedding event, just for the $$, but definitely prefer wildlife, macro, landscape, possibly product and portrait or boudoir, only if working with a very selective and small team, of alone in the case of outdoor/nature photography. You can see on my IG account at photos.by.monty that I'm still looking to define what genre I identify myself with. Many others on Instagram are the same way or even worse. Anyway, I think that the topic of this video was an EXCELLENT choice and that deserves more development. Thanks Pye !!
Thankyou for such an Interesting, Wonderful and Helpful Video❤️.
Yay!
Can’t wait to get the tutorial, just started shooting this year.
I'm looking forward to it myself!
Pye, thanks for confirming my choices!
You got it!
Thank you so much for this great Video... I have just bought your awesome two courses in the creative platform but this video helps me a lot... thank you so much again... greetings from Venice Italy
Great video! I would really love to be able to photograph products at home as a professional, right now I just create my own setups for stock photography.
@slrlounge are your presets coming to capture one?
Awesome Video. Thanks for that honest divorce Story, that must have been really hard to Photograph weddings.
Was a challenging time for sure, lots of growth tho.
You have a nice mug. :O)
Haha
And I'm sure some photographers became successful by breaking the rules and bucking the trend.