
I love how opinionated this community is. There is no right, no wrong – just a good bit of discussion…
In case you’re lost, I promised to follow up this earlier popular Which Photo is Better A or B? post. The discussion on these is always spirited–in this case the post received more than 1000 comments in 24 hours–of which I read them all. A breakdown by numbers, my particular take (it was different than most of your votes), and a fascinating old JWT video that features Stephen King and a box of hammers, which subtly reveals a good bit about products and our emotions around them, all after the jump…
First, here’s a breakdown.
1. By popular voting, reader choice is Photo A. Overall opinions mostly hinged on the facts that “you could see more of the product” OR it was non-vote for B, in which the sentiment was centered on “the lens flare is too distracting”…
2. This advertising image was indeed shot for LuluLemon and, true to our readership popular voting, the final call on this image from the client was indeed Photo A. I like A. It’s a super solid shot. Clear. Tight. Right on brief and right on my personal style.
3. But my preference was for image B. I like the special sauce that the flare adds. That said, I certainly and completely understand the client choice – professionals always default to the people writing the checks. There are often clear marketing objective that play a role before the shoot AND many objective arise/come out during and after the shoot… In the end, to the credit of LuluLemon’s team –and they’re a really smart bunch– they really wanted to see the product since it was one of their first foray’s into running wear. I love the final image in A, but it’s perfectly ok for me to like B a little more.
Here’s why:
(First another glance at the images.)
This is PHOTO A, below.

THIS is PHOTO B, below.

First – remember I’ve talked at length before (post here: photographers push your art directors….) about my creative approach when on commercial shoots…. My initial goal: making the image from the creative brief…focused on pleasing the client, checking all the awesomeness boxes, where everybody on set looks at one another and says “we got the shot”. THEN, after that moment, push things a little bit and say “let me experiment”…push the concept a little more, check your own awesomeness box and throw that image into the mix for final selection. That was at work here. Image A was “the brief”. Image B, was me adding points of flare. In this case, a flare 😉 [*Note also that I often report on the client then choosing my “special sauce” image? Well, doesn’t always happen – as in this case here…But not to worry.]
Ok. I like image B purely because of the emotion involved. The emotion that the image makes me feel, the emotion that’s on the runners face, the emotion that I, as a runner, connect with when I go for long runs at sunset and my eye does the same thing that a camera sensor does when the sun hits it, etc. I disagree with technical arguments against this image. I worked for about 40 minutes to get this shot. The lens rendered the image beautifully, as did the camera. If you make the distraction image, I’m not buying it either. But that’s just me. I’m looking for the substance of the photo and it’s obviously not all to be found in the flare. My eyes move thru the photo.
There are always, as I mentioned above, marketing objectives that drive the content of commercial images… That’s their nature. But where the tug of war happens — and why I selected this pairing of images — is that the marketing objectives (here to make a really nice, connecting shot with the runner and the product) are sometimes at odds with a purely emotionally response based image. In fact, I believe that if you take away most of the technically-based comments below, that a majority of the people would actually connect more emotionally with Image B. Like yours truly.
Isn’t that the highest goal of an advertising image? To connect emotionally with the product or service? Debatable indeed, but it’s how I like to think about it. From both a creator perspective and as a buyer of stuff. It’s partially The client can always — and often does — think more comprehensively about the campaign than the artist who is actually shooting the campaign but my sentiment is emotion. Let the people higher on the pay scale decide the rest of the stuff…
With regard to commercial art specifically, I personally share a view shared in part by uber-planner (creative strategist) Stephen King puts it, as pulled from buddy of mine Feris Yakob over at Talent Imitates, Genius Steals:
“- communication is an indirect force rather than a direct persuasive one
– its primary role is to intensify a brand’s meaning totality (‘brand gestalt’) by creating intensity of feeling, rather than conveying rational messages
– it works most effectively by building long-term brand associations & values rather than via short-term sales shifts
– a planner’s role (photographer’s perhaps) is to … not get dragged into the nightmarish mechanistic false world of purchase intent methodologies.”
Pretty much sums up why we need to be pushing creativity to clients that we believe in, right? Ultimately they make choices based on bigger spheres, budgets, jobs, goals, etc than we do creating the work, BUT it shouldn’t keep us from making the stuff we feel is most creative after you “get the shot”.
What say you?
[Final departure: here’s a funny old 1970’s JWT agency video where these gents articulate in/around the emotional side of hammers and dress suits. Worth the 90 seconds if you like this stuff. ]









Hi Chris,
Have you tried putting these pics for people to choose and observe what they liked?
For me personally I liked image A.
What you are associating (The sun in eyes one experiences as a runner) is not a pleasant thing. We avoid it.
It would not be an emotion but a known displeasure.
Obviously the first thing that eye moves to in this image is runner and her face. Image A has more emotions in that case than Image B.
So personally for me Image A is the preferred one here. 🙂
Mohsin
http://www.facebook.com/mohsyn
My personal opinion is, that the two images, although set to sell the same thing, they are sending two different messages.
The first one, I think, is much more traditional in a commercial way and it easily sends a message: “I feel good in what I am doing and what I am wearing”.
For the second I’d say, that it tells me much more: “Folks, running is good. It’s heavenly!”. The focus and emotions go much more to the activity in kinda idyllic surroundings. I’d say here, I wanna run in the morning and feel the way this image makes me feel. But I kinda don’t pay any attention to what she’s wearing…
I like both and I would choose each one, but each for it’s own (different) message.
A: more tities involved
I did not comment on the previous blog post, but I also preferred photo A. My opinion is, that it is better suited for the purpose it was made. It is a clear, good picture. To me that works well for advertising. I fully understand your reasoning for preferring photo B, but I guess that has also to do with the history you associate with it (working for 40 minutes to get this shot) and the feeling you wanted to create. Photo B did not immediately elicit this feeling of warmth when I first looked at it, because I was mainly distracted by the size of the flare and the position right in the middle of the photo, which I did not find too pleasing artistically (but of course this is just my personal opinion). So this got in the way before the feeling of warmth could even develop on my end. 😉
Hey excellent work as always! is there any chance you can talk a bit more about the technical aspects of what went into creating both these shots would absolutely luv to hear from you about that!