Awwww, shucks. Thanks man! :blushing:
Let me ask you this, then: how often do you get out and shoot and how do you find such interesting subject matter? Do you take a drive with the sole purpose of trying to find something to shoot?
I have been going out at least once a week, either on a full 4 hour safari, or visiting a place in my notes, or revisting a shot I want to improve. I am calling it a 52, instead of a 365. But I spend some time in post just about everyday. So it's kinda like a 365, I guess.
Do I take a drive with the sole purpose of finding something interesting to shoot? Basically, yes. At this point I have a back log of "trips" to go on. Such as just walking down the main street in my neighborhood that has tons of old buildings, signs and whatnot, or going for a bike ride on the old canal tow path. I keep going back to the industrial "Flats" area and just keep finding things I have missed the last 4 times I have been down there.
Last weekend, I went back to a bridge to take pictures of various nuts (nuts and bolts kind) for a project, and I drove past a warehouse that looked boring from the sides facing the street in the direction I was going, and I turned to look at the back, and holy crap! Had I not thought to look behind me, I would have missed "Best Viewed on Hot Pink", and "Door with an Interesting Mood" (in my photostream). I had driven by that building many times and never noticed what I saw that day. Also because I stopped there, I saw cool things in the bridge supports ("Inconvenient Living") that again, I have driven by again and again. So, my wordy point is, cool stuff is out there, you might not see it the first time you look, or the second, but maybe the third. The more you are rewarded, you start seeing where to look, or how to look at things.
I can definitely relate to always looking for things to photograph and have thought on a few occasions that I really wished I had grabbed my camera before leaving the house. In fact, I am ALWAYS looking around me wondering how any given scene would photograph... it's an obsession.
Depending if the cool things you find that you wish you had your camera...if they are static, will be there in a week, write them down and go back later! If you don't well, then there's a problem
Also, I have gone back through old images and reworked them with a fresh mind and found things that would have been tossed, turned out to be big hits. So just because your shots don't do anything for you today, could only mean you need a fresh eye.