There are three parts that influence a final photo. A quality final photo. One that you love and that reflects who you are as the photographer and stylist.
The ratio of importance is:
30/15/55
Confidence/Gear/You
30% is your confidence level
For many of us, this one takes the longest to develop. It’s easy to think that photography is all about gear or the eye of the photographer, but if you don’t have the confidence that you are creating valuable work you are never going to put that work out there.
Something starts to happen when we stop looking to others for what they do and constantly comparing our own styles to theirs. When we stop watching the responses they get, the recognition they receive, and the placement of their work.
You free up a large chunk of space that allows you to focus on your own work, what you like to produce, and your individual style. The more you do this, the more confidence grows, the more work you produce that reflects your individual style, and the better skilled you become. It’s a repeating pattern that fuels your work and your confidence level. Focus, confidence, desire to create, increased skills, and repeat.
Confidence changes things.
15% is the gear you use
You know I use minimal gear, but I don’t want that to be confused with implying that it’s not important. It is important that your gear matches what you are trying to create.
Want to take pretty flatlays that you only post on Instagram? Your phone will be just fine. Want to photograph splashes and motion? You’ll need to understand shutter speeds and have the lens capable of producing what you envision. I have to have my 100-400mm lens to photograph wildlife from far away. My 50mm f/1.4 allows me to photograph at a shallow depth of field. I love creating food photos with my 24-105mm lens.
Once you use the gear necessary for the type of photography you are creating, its role stops there. The gear doesn’t control how you style and compose a shot, the angle you saw that no one else does, the way to plate something that is super creative, the color scheme used, the moment you captured that facial expression or snapped at just the right time that animal came into view.
55% is YOU.
That brings us to the largest component of the photo, you. The photographer who is possibly the stylist, too.
Trust me, when I got my first professional lens and I saw what I could create with depth of field, I rolled my eyes when I’d hear - it’s not the camera, it’s the photographer behind it. Because at that point in my career, it was most definitely the camera working the magic.
But as my work and skill level has grown, I now know that what makes my photos mine, are what I bring to them. The scene I see, how I position myself, how I see the colors working together, how I arrange the vegetables, how I choose to create negative space or fill the frame, how long I can wait out the elk to capture him eating grass, the sunrise on the specific day I took the photo, the surfaces and props I’ve searched for at vintage shops, the things I’ve found to use in photos during my travels.
You get it right? Hopefully, I’m being clear. It’s you. Who you are, where you are from, what you have access to, what you’ve been through, and where you are going.
There are other things involved, but this is the most important part of your photo.