Frank,
this is one of the posts I always wanted to create myself... didn't dare so far...
But - there is something specific to it:
It is not an issue of something strange or weird or completely new, it is an issue of what comes out of your mind in your personal situation in the community you live in and take your kind of photographs.
I saw an exhibition of photography students in Berlin last year.
The first prize was given to somebody who had taken photographs of abandoned immigrant homes in Berlin.
Seems awkward, but it hit an issue that is often discussed in my country, how we deal with immigrants seeking refuge in this wealthy part of our world.
There may be such an issue that is part of your interest in every-day life.
What field of interest might that be?
Work? Leisure? Street life? Love? Loneliness? Politics? Art?
Or might it be the simple interest in the presence of things and structures (like the people in Straight Photography taught in the 1920s).
I always come back to the thought that many aspects of photography are still dealing with the old issues of painting:
Portrait, landscape, architecture, still-life, nudes, tales, religious worship - it's been all the same from the renaissance to expressionism.
Or do something abstract. I did some shots of scaffoldings or water surfaces with the simple interest in structure, and some of the results still do please me.
Another idea could be to rely on anniversaries. We have 150 years of Sigmund Freud, 250 years of Mozart - there may be more local heroes in your area that might be worth a thought.
What is special of your area or community that meets your interests?
What has been bothering your mind, your feelings, your spirit apart from photography?
Go out and shoot it.
That should make enjoyable shooting, and that's the way I feel I get the best results.
I wish and assume it may be the same in your case.
Jesko
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2006 AD
800 yrs Dresden
80 yrs Zeiss Ikon