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Apr
02

How to Find Your Niche & Style in the Photography Market

By Aggie Villanueva

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by Aggie Villanueva

Check out the coaching session with Aggie to find your own nich

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EmptyEasel published a very interesting article today about discovering your artistic niche and style….I found it particularly insightful for all artists to consider.” Post by Nate at Imagekind blog.

Niche
+Style

Photographic Career
(or any artistic career for that matter)

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"Fairy Trail" the photo that started it all for me.
“Fairy Trail” the photo that started it all for me.

As a freelance writer I must have heard a thousand times. “Write what you know.” Why, I taught that myself in my writing workshops. I would expand that to “Write what you know and love.”

That is comparatively easy. I just wrote about what I loved (translate that knew). We all gravitate easily towards what we know and love. And there is no other brain that can write what formulates in our own hearts and minds.

Not so with picture-taking. When I entered the photography market I held a spanking new SLR camera, just like all other professionals use, and wondered how my picture of a landscape could be different than everyone else’s.

Sure I could twist and lie on the ground and wildly change perspectives, but in the end how is my shot really different than everyone else’s? How could I find a niche for my work that no one else could fit into, and no one else could even create?

Bedtime Story
Bedtime Story

For me it went something like this:

My Niche: I live in the beautiful foothills of the San Pedro Wilderness, with access to stunning landscapes and crumbling Southwest architecture. I moved here because physically and spiritually I was drawn. Viola – my niche.

My Style: This is harder. One day I was shooting a sunset over a small mountain lake and turned around to see the landscape behind me lit as if the sun were a black light from a 70s Hippie pad.

Upon downloading the day’s work, that was my favorite photo. But it looked bland and almost colorless compared to what my eyes beheld in person. I thought my camera was defective. I began to play with Photoshop until the scene emerged as a fairy tale path.

I had the light bulb experience as I admired my wonderland work. I thought back to my ex-husband telling me I live in a fairy tale and that life isn’t a fairy tale. I remembered telling him that my life is a fairy tale and if he were to try and taint it I would banish him to Neverneverland.

I studied this dreamy photo of the dirt road leading to my cabin. I thought, “If I live in a fairy tale, and this is the path leading to me, then this must be a Fairy Trail.”

My artistic world was birthed. This was it. This romantic application to my photos in post production was my style. Long story short, I named my gallery of photo art the Fairy Trails Gallery; Portals to Paradise. And that photo is the portal clicked on to enter my path.

Each photo, after I’ve manipulated it to look like I see it, and only I can see it, is magic for me. And if it creates magic for me, there are people out there who will also be drawn to it.

Chocolate Drop
Chocolate Drop

Your Niche is What You Know

Finding your niche may take some time. But spend that time. It is not wasted. With every photo we learn something about technical aspects. Go out regularly photographing. Don’t think about. Just shoot what you enjoy. Soon you’ll you realize your favorite subjects. Stick to them.

Think about where you live. Do you live there by birth or choice? Did you relocate there? Do you love your area, inspired by its beauty? If so, you may be a landscapist, not a portrait photographer, cooped up in a studio all day.

Conversely, if you are captivated by people’s expressions and individual beauty, longing to capture it, you may very well be a portrait photographer. You may live in a dirty city where you don’t even like to go outside. Or see the innate beauty of a fallen leaf afloat in the oil-slick of a city puddle and be counted among our troops of street photographers documenting city life. There are innumerable niches between these extremes.

Your Style is What You Love

Gilded Shores
Gilded Shores

Take time to peruse articles and tutorials on your discovered preferences. But don’t bog yourself down with them. You’ll find that reading just one will inspire several ideas and urges. Act on them. Write them down in one place. One day you will see the common thread among them.

Is there something that people have accused you of all your life, like me living in a fairy tale? Often times those criticisms are our strengths being misinterpreted by others. Think about that. Is there a connection between those accusations and the subjects you love to shoot and/or the way you choose to edit those subjects during post processing?

Are you adept at interpreting subtle nuances? Do you prefer things sliced and clean as a minimalist? The fact is whatever you are, that is your style – simple as that. The rest is technicalities. Just keep shooting and don’t stress over it, and your niche and style will expose itself as truly as that camera in your hands; pun intended.

You can see Aggie’s work at:
Cielos Rojos (Red Skies) Photographic Arts
Cielos Rojos Fine Arts Gift Gallery

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Check out the coaching session with Aggie to find your own nich

Imagine
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Comments

  1. AGGIE,
    I love this article and I have it marked, it’t things that I have known before and tried to work out once or twice when I was trying to design a website “My NICHE MARKET” ugh I hated that and gave up… But I love the fact that you speak about just keep shooting, I have been shooting for 17 years. I can see my style in my work, haven’t found my niche yet, I will keep looking for that:) Beautifully presented!

  2. Thankx for the kudos, Molly. I really appreciate it. Think about the photography you do that is most important to you. What give you the most satisfaction? Most likely that’s your niche.

  3. Robyn Hatton says:

    You give wings to dreams with this sweet article. Thank you!

  4. Awwwww. Thankx. That’s the whole reason we’re all here. I’m really pleased it helped. Just holler if you need anything at all.

  5. [...] David Griffin’s talk, How Photography Connects Us, focuses on photojournalists’ inimitable images bringing to light some of the most pressing issues of our day. I’m primarily a landscapist, but our motives are all the same. I use Photoshop to manipulate my images until they look similar to how I see thing in real life, which is, as we all know by now, through rose-colored glasses because I live in a fairy tale! (For more on that.) [...]

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