- Joined
- Dec 11, 2006
- Messages
- 18,743
- Reaction score
- 8,048
- Location
- Mid-Atlantic US
- Can others edit my Photos
- Photos NOT OK to edit
- Banned
- #1
Like most photographers or, in the larger case, most artists, I like people to see my work. In the overwhelming flood of photography oriented websites out there, pictures just aren't enough. Pictures don't stick up above the crowd and, unless one is very good and prolific, it isn't enough to bring people back.
So I write articles on a blog. Rather than short bits that are usually rather thin in content, I tend to write longer pieces; these longer pieces take both a fair amount of work and a good amount of actual real life thought so I don't publish too often.
Surprisingly enough these articles get a good many readers but very few comments.
I just pulled down the top reads from 2013; here they are in descending order (the absolute number is a bit irrelevant since some were posted at the beginning of 2013 and some at the very end.)
In 2014 I wrote virtually exclusively reviews of local art shows and those totals are artificially high so I left them out.
The first one in the following list got just over 2800 views and the last, just above 1100.
How to improve your photography: your own twelve step program
**Adventures on the Road in Northern Laos
Shooting in P mode & Why photographers defend their methods
11 Tips for Beginning Photographers - How to Start Taking Pictures
Getting to a Final Image - some words on editing photos for a new photographer
**Adventures on the Road in Northern Laos - the third and last part
**Esther, Sitting By the Road
My opinions about Photographing the Homeless and Using Hipstagram-like Filters; negative
What is Street Photography? - and what it isn't
Art Photography - a few roses, a lot of thorns
Aligning the head, the eye and the heart - the spirit of street photography
Semiotics of Images - why some images are more comfortable than others -Part 2
**Adventures on the Road in Northern Laos Part 2
The Meaning of 'meaning'
** travel
Ignoring the travel pieces, it seems that the title is a crucial element in attracting people; the title must respond to a common question in photography or at least have important words in the title that will show up in search engines. New photographers, or even beginning photographers, seem to be attracted to articles that tell them how to climb the learning curve.
(IME, Multi-part articles don't do as well, losing about a third of readers from first to second and then to third.)
I don't go crazy with keywords for seo but I do enter as many of the really relevant ones I can think of. I'm not trying to lure people in for the clicks but to get people to actually think of me as having something useful to say.
The articles are not dense text; I use a lot of paragraph breaks and insert images as often as needed.
Although clicking on a picture will bring them back to a gallery, it is, or it should be, clear that the articles are about the text and not about luring people to look at images with useless text.This is intended to be a blog of idea rather than a blog to show off my latest pictures.
The secondary result of writing these pieces is that I have been forced to actually read and then think a lot about photography - and my own in particular - so I ended up having a much more intricate stance on photography than I had before.
Whenever I think of a topic, I start a draft article so I always have a few in early stage and that keeps me going when immediate ideas dry up.
My rules for writing my own blog posts:
So I write articles on a blog. Rather than short bits that are usually rather thin in content, I tend to write longer pieces; these longer pieces take both a fair amount of work and a good amount of actual real life thought so I don't publish too often.
Surprisingly enough these articles get a good many readers but very few comments.
I just pulled down the top reads from 2013; here they are in descending order (the absolute number is a bit irrelevant since some were posted at the beginning of 2013 and some at the very end.)
In 2014 I wrote virtually exclusively reviews of local art shows and those totals are artificially high so I left them out.
The first one in the following list got just over 2800 views and the last, just above 1100.
How to improve your photography: your own twelve step program
**Adventures on the Road in Northern Laos
Shooting in P mode & Why photographers defend their methods
11 Tips for Beginning Photographers - How to Start Taking Pictures
Getting to a Final Image - some words on editing photos for a new photographer
**Adventures on the Road in Northern Laos - the third and last part
**Esther, Sitting By the Road
My opinions about Photographing the Homeless and Using Hipstagram-like Filters; negative
What is Street Photography? - and what it isn't
Art Photography - a few roses, a lot of thorns
Aligning the head, the eye and the heart - the spirit of street photography
Semiotics of Images - why some images are more comfortable than others -Part 2
**Adventures on the Road in Northern Laos Part 2
The Meaning of 'meaning'
** travel
Ignoring the travel pieces, it seems that the title is a crucial element in attracting people; the title must respond to a common question in photography or at least have important words in the title that will show up in search engines. New photographers, or even beginning photographers, seem to be attracted to articles that tell them how to climb the learning curve.
(IME, Multi-part articles don't do as well, losing about a third of readers from first to second and then to third.)
I don't go crazy with keywords for seo but I do enter as many of the really relevant ones I can think of. I'm not trying to lure people in for the clicks but to get people to actually think of me as having something useful to say.
The articles are not dense text; I use a lot of paragraph breaks and insert images as often as needed.
Although clicking on a picture will bring them back to a gallery, it is, or it should be, clear that the articles are about the text and not about luring people to look at images with useless text.This is intended to be a blog of idea rather than a blog to show off my latest pictures.
The secondary result of writing these pieces is that I have been forced to actually read and then think a lot about photography - and my own in particular - so I ended up having a much more intricate stance on photography than I had before.
Whenever I think of a topic, I start a draft article so I always have a few in early stage and that keeps me going when immediate ideas dry up.
My rules for writing my own blog posts:
- Be succinct while actually delivering ideas and rationale; talk about what, how and, most important, why;
- Be reality based, be about how I do things in the real world. Whenever I've read books or articles about art, when the topic veers off into conceptual issues, I lose track of what the hell the author means - and thus I lose interest. Perhaps I'm not smart enough for the conceptual stuff, and;
- Don't try to evangelize. I write about is what works for me - if you do it differently, OK. Except for surgeons, there is no body of people more invested in the 'rightness' of their own technique than photographers - and any insinuation that there is some way better than the way they do something is guaranteed to get resistance.
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