Chase Jarvis Chase Jarvis
  • Photos
  • Projects
  • About
  • Blog
  • Book
Chase Jarvis Chase Jarvis
  • Photos
  • Projects
  • About
  • Blog
  • Book

Developing Your Photographic Style: Excerpt From A Chat with Zack Arias

I recently got a flood of questions via Twitter asking about developing a personal photographic style, which made me think about a million conversations I’ve had with my photographer buddies over the years… And I was wishing I had recorded those. And then I remembered that I DID have one that I recorded from an old chasejarvis LIVE with my pal Zack Arias. He’s a fun guy, great shooter and very talented photography instructor. Here’s a few nuggets from our banter (plucked from the middle of the conversation and transcribed…) about developing personal photographic style…

CJ: Tell me the first time you realized that you actually had a style. Because for me, I can’t believe that you can take pictures for as long as it took me to take pictures before I actually could say that I have a style. Do you remember when that moment was for you?

ZA: I’d say it was probably just a couple of years ago. I’ve been pursuing this… If I count going to school and assisting and managing a studio, and trying to get my freelance career going, and then failing miserably, and then restarting it, that’s been about fifteen years. And I’d say…

CJ: Is that where the gray came from?

ZA: Yeah. That’s where the gray and all the kids, one of which you can hear in the background. Hawk is in the audience here. I guess in just the last couple of years I could finally sort of sit back and go, huh, this is what I do and this is how I do it and this is how I approach photography and this is kind of my style.

CJ: But it took a long time.

ZA: Yeah. Style is something that takes a long, long, long time and it takes; really, what it takes is shooting and just doing it over and over and over. It has to just develop and you can think you’re sort of on like when I started in photography, I thought I knew where I was going with my photography and how I would shoot. But that changed and I’d go down a different route and that would change and even just as last year, I was trying to break out of how I shoot things, do things differently and what I found that was most successful was just to go back to doing what I do and just kind of sticking with it. Every year, I seem to try to push my style and every year I fail pretty miserably doing that.  And it’s just one of those I need to learn slowly and just slowly move forward.

CJ: If you try and develop a style from your living room, it’s unlikely that you’re going to and a lot of people, like, oh, when do you know when you got a style? You don’t know until you look back six months or a year or two years and say, oh, wow.

ZA: Or ten years or a decade. And at the beginning, you’re usually kind of replicating someone else’s style.

CJ: Right and imitation, that’s a great way of learning.

ZA: And that’s part of it. I replicated all the magazine photographers that I followed. I went out and shot just like them. I learned how they did it, but I had to get moving on from that….

If you want more, the entire video conversation is here.

Related Posts

10 Things Every Creative Person (That’s YOU) Must Learn
051026_ChaseJarvis_einstein_writing_vlrgwidec
Writing Makes Photographers More Creative — 5 Easy Tips
Daniel Pink: The Power of Regret
Chris Hutchins of Chase Jarvis LIVE
Chris Hutchins: All the Hacks to Maximize Your Life
Chris Burkard on Chase Jarvis LIVE
The Wayward Path of Photographer Chris Burkard
Make Your Message Heard with Victoria Wellman

27 replies on:
Developing Your Photographic Style: Excerpt From A Chat with Zack Arias

Comments navigation

Previous
Next
  1. Dwain Koralewski says:
    October 9, 2014 at 6:10 am

    Good write-up, I’m regular visitor of one’s site, maintain up the excellent operate, and It is going to be a regular visitor for a lengthy time.

  2. myntra coupons says:
    September 29, 2014 at 2:08 am

    This excellent is one of the cheapest domain I have always visitied. the details are always fabulous.

  3. Darcy Uren says:
    January 8, 2013 at 5:04 am

    Keep cheery the enormous job , I glance at not many blog posts by this site and I deem that your blog is rattling motivating and contains sets of enormous information.

  4. Pingback: Five Blogs Every Working Photographer Should Follow « Blog of Philadelphia Photographer, Mitch Boyer
  5. Pingback: Through the Orchid | Darin Rogers Photography

Comments navigation

Previous
Next

Comments are closed.

BUY NEVER PLAY IT SAFE NOW!

Get weekly, curated access to the best of everything I do.

Popular Posts

Gary Vaynerchuk on Chase Jarvis LIVEGary Vaynerchuk’s Playbook to Turn Your Passion into an Empire
affinity_vector_poster_urlAffinity Studio vs Adobe Creative Cloud for creative pros: It just got real
midjourney for photographersMidjourney for Photographers: A Professional’s Field Guide
Tim Ferriss on Chase Jarvis LIVETim Ferriss’s Rules for Rigging the Game and Building Unstoppable Momentum
20190530_CJ_LIVE_Ramit_Sethi_EOSR_8067-webRamit Sethi’s Playbook to Define and Fund Your Own ‘Rich Life’ (as seen on Netflix)
20251013_CJLIVE_BreneBrown_Revisit_Thumb_16x9_v2.5Brené Brown Revisited: The Courage to Belong in a Divided World
nano banana deskNano Banana (Google Gemini) 101 for Photographers
20241001_CJLIVE_GaryVeeShow_Syndicate_Blog_16x9How Self-Betrayal Is Holding You Back
20250224_CJLIVE_DontLetYourDreamsDie_Micro_Thumb_16x9_v2.5How to Trust Your Gut (Even When Fear Tells You Not To)
20251013_CJLIVE_PortfolioTrap_Micro_Thumb_16x9_v2.5Stop Curating. Start Creating.

Daily Creative Projects

© 2024 Chase Jarvis. All rights reserved.