This evening, over the phone, my Mom was telling me that my photography has gotten so good that I should be photographing for a magazine or something. I’d just uploaded the first half of my photos from our Chicago trip, and she’d been paging through them as we talked.
Now, mothers are known for exaggerating the talents of their progeny. However, being that mine is a portrait photographer by trade, I’d like to think that gives her opinion a little more weight. Still, though, I see the other photos on Flickr — the ones that make the Explore page, or have high ratings of Interestingness — and I realize that I’m nowhere close to being in their league, for the most part.
Then, again, sometimes I look at photos on Flickr, or photos for sale at art shows, and I think, “My photos are easily that good!” Maybe I just don’t give myself enough credit. Maybe I don’t pimp myself out enough on Flickr by posting to relevant groups. Maybe I should start submitting my work to stock photography websites/companies. After all, I’ve been published in a magazine (Tricycle) and in an online travel guide (Schmap Baltimore), among others.
Then the question becomes: when will I feel satisfied with my photography? When I’m making a steady income from my photos? When one of my photos is recognized by Flickr’s super-secret Interestingness algorithm for the Explore page? And how much time and effort do I put into these goals, just to satisfy my own ego?
Maybe, for now, I can simply remain satisfied with my continuing progress as an amateur photographer, and just enjoy taking pictures.
a lot of really great shots are just being in the right place at the right time, knowing the angle to shoot it at is what you have. anyone can hold a camera and take a picture ( even a blind man or woman) SEEING the shot is a tallent. a tallent you DO have. anyone can take a ruller and draw a box or a triangle its the curves and motion that takes tallent. you SEE it most people don’t. Oh they can look at your work and copy it or say it looks good but don’t quit know why. I’m not saying to give up your day job, I’m just saying keep up the photography, and don’t sell yourself short.