Steveh
Well-known
Hi all - I'd like to get some tips from those of you who have been through slumps in your photography and come out the other side (or not 😱) on how you dealt with it.
I always blow a bit hot and cold with my photography but a couple of months ago it was as if somebody just clicked a switch and I seemed to lose all interest almost overnight. I stopped looking at photography websites, haven't picked up any of my cameras, just nothing there. I can't really put my finger on why though - some of it may be the awful weather we've had in the UK for the last few months and getting into another interest that has been taking up a lot of my free time, but all my photography "mojo" just seems to have vanished.
So two questions:
- has anyone got any useful tips to break the slump?
- should I even try?
The second one is the bigger one for me - there's no particular reason I "have" to take photos, so do I just have a complete break and let things follow their course? I have a holiday in Morocco at the end of May and a three day photography workshop in London booked for mid-June so I'm hoping they will shake things up, but they don't, then what? Just let photography go and wait for it to come back to me, or do something to force it?
Part of my problem I think is knowing that the only way I can really take my photography to the next level is giving it more time and attention than I currently have to give it - I've started work on a couple of projects but I have a demanding job and a long commute that take up most of my time during the week, and at weekends my family want their share of my time so if I manage to grab three hours on a Sunday morning I'm doing well. Realistically I may not really have time to really get stuck into photography until I retire, which is a good decade away, and that can make it hard to find the immediate motivation.
Help and thoughts appreciated! BTW I don't think "try using a different camera" is the answer - I have a pile of cameras of all kinds, film and digital, but no interest in picking up any of them.
Selling them all has crossed my mind, as a "cold turkey" solution - has anyone ever done that?
I always blow a bit hot and cold with my photography but a couple of months ago it was as if somebody just clicked a switch and I seemed to lose all interest almost overnight. I stopped looking at photography websites, haven't picked up any of my cameras, just nothing there. I can't really put my finger on why though - some of it may be the awful weather we've had in the UK for the last few months and getting into another interest that has been taking up a lot of my free time, but all my photography "mojo" just seems to have vanished.
So two questions:
- has anyone got any useful tips to break the slump?
- should I even try?
The second one is the bigger one for me - there's no particular reason I "have" to take photos, so do I just have a complete break and let things follow their course? I have a holiday in Morocco at the end of May and a three day photography workshop in London booked for mid-June so I'm hoping they will shake things up, but they don't, then what? Just let photography go and wait for it to come back to me, or do something to force it?
Part of my problem I think is knowing that the only way I can really take my photography to the next level is giving it more time and attention than I currently have to give it - I've started work on a couple of projects but I have a demanding job and a long commute that take up most of my time during the week, and at weekends my family want their share of my time so if I manage to grab three hours on a Sunday morning I'm doing well. Realistically I may not really have time to really get stuck into photography until I retire, which is a good decade away, and that can make it hard to find the immediate motivation.
Help and thoughts appreciated! BTW I don't think "try using a different camera" is the answer - I have a pile of cameras of all kinds, film and digital, but no interest in picking up any of them.
Selling them all has crossed my mind, as a "cold turkey" solution - has anyone ever done that?