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Hey friends, Chase here
Let’s talk about one of the most important questions every creator eventually asks:
How do I find my creative voice?
Or maybe you’ve heard it framed another way:
How do I develop a personal style?
How do I make work that actually feels like mine?
How do I stop copying what everyone else is doing and start creating from a place that is uniquely my own?
This question comes up all the time because it sits at the center of the creative life. Whether you’re a photographer, designer, writer, filmmaker, musician, entrepreneur, or someone who simply feels called to make things, there comes a point where technical ability is not enough.
You can know how to use the tools.
You can understand the software.
You can study the masters.
You can follow the trends.
You can learn the settings, the systems, the formulas, the workflows.
But eventually, you hit a deeper question:
What makes this mine?
That is what this episode is about.
And I want to be clear from the start: finding your creative voice is not about inventing some perfect brand identity overnight. It’s not about locking yourself into one narrow lane forever. It’s not about deciding, intellectually, “This is my style now,” and then forcing every piece of work to fit inside that box.
Your creative voice is much more organic than that.
It is your fingerprint.
Your point of view.
Your taste.
Your history.
Your instincts.
Your lived experience.
Your way of seeing the world, translated through the things you make.
And the only way to find it is to make.
Not once. Not occasionally. Not only when you feel inspired.
Again and again and again.
🎧 Listen to the Episode Right Here:
The Big Question: What Is Personal Style?
Personal style can sound like one of those vague creative phrases that floats around in the universe without ever becoming useful.
People say things like, “You need to find your style,” or “You need to develop your voice,” but what does that actually mean?
At its simplest, personal style is the thing that makes your work recognizable.
It’s the equivalent of your handwriting.
You don’t have to think about your handwriting every time you write your name. It’s not something you consciously construct letter by letter. It just comes out of you because it has been shaped by repetition, history, muscle memory, and identity.
Your creative style works the same way.
It is the unique aesthetic fingerprint that you unconsciously put on everything you make.
Think about music. You can hear a Prince song for just a few measures and know it’s Prince before his voice even enters. There’s a signature there. A rhythm. A tone. A sensibility. A way the work announces itself.
Think about photography. You can look at an Ansel Adams landscape and recognize the scale, the drama, the tonality, the reverence for nature. It has a point of view.
That’s personal style.
It’s not just what you make.
It’s how you see.
It’s what you notice.
It’s what you repeat without realizing you’re repeating it.
It’s the pattern behind the work.
And that matters because without some kind of recognizable point of view, you’re just bouncing around.
You might be technically capable. You might be able to make a good photograph, a good song, a good design, a good film, a good essay. But if there’s nothing distinctive about the way you make it, people have a harder time connecting that work back to you.
Personal style is what helps the work become yours.
Why Your Creative Voice Matters
There are two big reasons personal style matters.
The first is personal.
If you spend your life chasing everyone else’s style, you’re going to end up miserable.
Now, let’s be honest: early in the creative journey, imitation is part of the process. That’s normal. That’s healthy. That’s how we learn.
You see someone whose work you admire and you try to understand how they did it. You copy a lighting setup. You study a sentence structure. You recreate a beat. You reverse-engineer a design. You try to make something that looks or sounds or feels like the thing that inspired you.
There’s nothing wrong with that.
In the beginning, imitation helps you learn how to move the tools around. It helps you close the gap between what you see in your mind and what you’re actually capable of making.
But imitation is not the destination.
If all you ever do is copy what’s trendy, or borrow someone else’s point of view, or chase whatever style is getting attention right now, you are not expressing yourself. You are expressing the culture around you.
And that is a direct path to burnout.
Because the reason we make things, at the deepest level, is expression.
We make because something inside wants to come out. We make because it feels good to turn an internal experience into something real in the world. We make because creativity is one of the ways we become more fully ourselves.
If your work is always a response to someone else’s style, you lose that connection.
You become a mirror instead of a source.
The second reason personal style matters is practical.
If you want to do creative work professionally, you do not want to be paid merely for your time.
There is nothing wrong with getting paid for your time. That can be part of the path. But the ultimate goal is not to be treated like a pair of hands.
The ultimate goal is to be paid for your vision.
You don’t want someone to hire you because you own a camera.
You want them to hire you because only you see the assignment that way.
You don’t want someone to hire you because you can operate software.
You want them to hire you because your taste, your judgment, and your perspective create value.
You don’t want to be interchangeable.
The most recognized creatives in the world are not valuable because they can execute a task. They are valuable because they bring a specific point of view to the table.
That’s what separates craft from commodity.
When people can recognize your fingerprints on the work, when they can say, “That feels like you,” you begin to move into a different category. You’re no longer just competing on speed, price, or availability.
You’re competing on vision.
And that is where the upside is.
The Creative Gap
One of the most important parts of this conversation is what Ira Glass famously called the creative gap.
The creative gap is the distance between what you can see in your mind and what you’re actually capable of making right now.
Every creator knows this feeling.
You have a vision. You can feel what you want the work to be. You can almost see it, hear it, taste it. But when you sit down to make the thing, the result falls short.
The photograph doesn’t look the way it looked in your head.
The song doesn’t hit the way you imagined.
The essay feels clumsy.
The design feels flat.
The film doesn’t carry the emotion you hoped it would.
That gap is frustrating.
But it is also the path.
Craft is how you close the gap. You make, you study, you adjust, you learn, you make again. Over time, your ability catches up to your taste. You get better at translating the thing in your mind into the thing in the world.
But here’s the trap:
If you spend that entire process only copying other people, you might improve technically without ever developing a voice of your own.
You might become skilled at imitation.
But mastery is not just being able to reproduce what already exists. Mastery is being able to make what only you can make.
Personal Style Is Your Point of View
Your creative voice is not just an aesthetic.
It’s not just black and white photography, clean typography, heavy brushstrokes, fast sketches, cinematic lighting, sparse production, or bold color.
Those things can be part of a style, but they are not the whole thing.
Your style is the point of view underneath those choices.
It is the reason you reach for certain tools.
The reason you frame things a certain way.
The reason you simplify here and exaggerate there.
The reason you are drawn to certain subjects, moods, colors, rhythms, textures, or stories.
The episode uses a great example from the world of design: imagine trying to design a tennis shoe inspired by a glass bottle of gin.
Suddenly, the bottle becomes a filter. You might notice the transparency, the edges, the shape, the weight, the way light moves through it. Those qualities start informing the shoe.
That is a useful way to think about style.
Your personal style is the filter your work passes through.
It’s not limited to one medium. If you are a photographer, designer, musician, writer, or multidisciplinary creator, your style should still carry across what you make. The medium may change, but the point of view travels.
That’s when people can look at a piece and say:
That feels like you.
Not because you repeated yourself mechanically, but because your way of seeing is present.
How Do You Find Your Creative Voice?
Here’s the part people don’t always want to hear:
It takes time.
There is no shortcut that replaces making the work.
You can think about your style.
You can journal about it.
You can moodboard it.
You can study other artists.
You can talk about your influences.
You can define your values.
All of that can be useful.
But none of it replaces the act of making.
The best way to find your personal style is to make as much as you can, at a regular cadence, ideally as quickly and consistently as possible.
Because your style is not something you force into existence.
It is something you discover through repetition.
You make one thing. Then ten things. Then a hundred things.
At first, it may feel random. You may feel like you’re all over the place. You may try on other people’s approaches. You may borrow. You may experiment. You may make things that don’t feel like you at all.
That’s okay.
The making is the sorting mechanism.
Over time, patterns start to appear. You notice what you keep returning to. You notice what feels alive. You notice what feels false. You notice the choices you make when nobody is telling you what to do.
And eventually, if you put twenty of your pieces on a wall mixed in with other people’s work, someone should be able to walk in and pick yours out.
That is the litmus test.
Not because every piece looks identical, but because there is a through-line.
There is a signal.
There is a voice.
Your Style Might Not Be What You Expected
One of the most important reminders in this episode is that your personal style may not be what you thought it would be.
You might think you want to be known for clean, minimal design, only to realize that your real energy comes through in fast, expressive, messy sketches.
You might think you want to make quiet, polished work, only to discover that your strength is intensity, humor, or chaos.
You might think you want to be one kind of artist, but the work keeps revealing that you are someone else.
That can be uncomfortable.
But it can also be liberating.
Your creative voice is not always the version of yourself you imagined. Sometimes it is the version of yourself that keeps showing up when you stop performing.
This is why making is so important.
You cannot discover your true style by sitting around and thinking about who you wish you were.
You discover it by creating enough evidence that you can finally see who you actually are.
What You’ll Hear in This Episode
This episode breaks the question of creative voice into three practical parts: what personal style is, why it matters, and how to actually find it.
Here are the ideas worth listening for:
- Why personal style is like your creative handwriting — the unconscious fingerprint you put on everything you make
- Why imitation is useful early on, but dangerous if you never move beyond it
- How the creative gap works — and why craft is what helps you close it
- Why you don’t want to be paid only for your time, but for your point of view
- How recognizable style builds value, trust, and creative opportunity
- Why you can’t force your personal style — you have to uncover it through making
- Why making 100 things teaches you more than endlessly thinking about the perfect direction
- How specialization can actually create more freedom, not less
- Why trying to be everything to everyone will dilute your work and drain your energy
Timecodes So You Can Jump to What You Need
If you’re not listening straight through, here are a few landmarks to help you find the part that speaks to where you are right now:
- 01:45 – Welcome and the big question: how do you develop a personal style?
- 02:04 – The three-part framework: what personal style is, why it matters, and how to find it
- 02:50 – What personal style actually means for photographers, designers, writers, musicians, and creators
- 03:18 – Personal style as your creative handwriting or aesthetic fingerprint
- 04:34 – Why developing a personal style matters
- 05:25 – Why chasing everyone else’s style leads to misery and burnout
- 06:08 – Ira Glass, the creative gap, and the path toward mastery
- 07:10 – Why you want to be paid for your point of view, not just your time
- 09:46 – Edward de Bono, Stefan Sagmeister, and using outside references to understand style
- 11:31 – The tactical answer: how to actually find your personal style
- 11:46 – Why there are no shortcuts — and why making is the path
- 12:32 – Why your unique life experience is the source of your point of view
- 13:41 – Make one thing, then ten things, then one hundred things
- 14:00 – The litmus test: can someone identify your work in a crowd?
- 16:06 – Why you cannot be all things to all people
- 16:55 – How mastery in one area can help you learn and master many things
- 18:01 – Why specialization unlocks opportunity instead of limiting it
Read This If You Feel Like You Haven’t Found Your Voice Yet
If you feel like you haven’t found your creative voice yet, I want you to hear this:
You are not behind.
You are in the process.
It is easy to look at someone whose style seems fully formed and assume they were born with it. But what you are seeing is usually the result of years of making, failing, repeating, refining, borrowing, rejecting, and returning to the work.
Style is not a lightning bolt.
It is sediment.
It builds layer by layer through practice.
Every project teaches you something. Every experiment leaves a trace. Every failed attempt helps you understand what is not yours. Every finished piece gives you more information.
So if you feel unclear, the answer is not to wait until you feel certain.
The answer is to make.
Make the thing.
Then make another.
Then make another.
Then look back and listen for the pattern.
Your voice is not hiding from you. It is waiting for enough evidence to reveal itself.
The Danger of Chasing Trends
There is a difference between research and copying.
Looking broadly at culture, studying what’s happening, noticing what inspires you, and learning from other artists is part of being creatively alive.
But copying one person’s style over and over again is not research. It’s imitation.
And if you spend too much time chasing trends, you train yourself to look outward for permission instead of inward for direction.
Trends can teach you what’s happening now.
They cannot tell you who you are.
That doesn’t mean you need to ignore the world. It means you need to metabolize what you see.
Take in inspiration. Study widely. Notice what moves you. But then ask:
What do I have to say about this?
What is my relationship to this idea?
What part of this connects to my lived experience?
How does this become mine?
Your work does not become original because it appears out of nowhere. Nothing does.
Your work becomes original when your influences pass through your point of view.
Don’t Overthink It. Make It.
There is a line in this episode that matters:
Don’t overthink it. Just make it.
That does not mean thinking has no place in the creative process. Reflection matters. Strategy matters. Taste matters. Intention matters.
But thinking cannot replace making.
A lot of creators get stuck because they want to understand their style before they create enough work to reveal it.
That’s backwards.
You don’t find your voice and then make the work.
You make the work and find your voice through it.
This is why personal projects are so valuable. They give you a place to create without needing permission. They give you a space to follow curiosity. They let you experiment without the pressure of a client, an audience, or a perfect outcome.
Personal projects are where your style gets room to breathe.
Not everything has to be monetized.
Not everything has to be optimized.
Not everything has to be posted.
Not everything has to become part of your portfolio.
Sometimes the point is simply to learn what happens when you follow the impulse.
Questions to Ask Yourself
If you want to turn this episode into action, take a few minutes and sit with these questions:
- What kind of work do I keep returning to, even when nobody asks me to?
- Whose style am I currently copying, and what am I learning from that imitation?
- Where have I mistaken trend-chasing for creative growth?
- What choices show up again and again in my work?
- What subjects, themes, colors, sounds, rhythms, or ideas keep pulling me back?
- What would I make if I stopped trying to be impressive?
- What would I make if I stopped trying to be for everyone?
- Can someone recognize my work without seeing my name attached to it?
- What do I need to make 10 more of before I judge whether I have a style?
A Simple Practice for Finding Your Creative Voice
Here’s a simple exercise:
- Choose one format. A photo series, a set of sketches, a short essay series, a beat tape, a design study, a daily video, whatever fits your craft.
- Make 10 versions. Not one perfect version. Ten honest attempts.
- Do them quickly enough that you can’t over-polish the life out of them.
- Put them side by side. Look for what repeats.
- Ask someone you trust what feels most like you.
- Then make 10 more.
The goal is not to force consistency.
The goal is to gather evidence.
What do you keep doing naturally? What feels alive? What feels borrowed? What feels like performance? What feels like truth?
Your style is hidden in those patterns.
Specialization Is Not a Trap
A lot of creators resist personal style because they worry it will limit them.
They think, “If I become known for one thing, I’ll lose my range.”
But specialization does not have to mean becoming narrow.
It means becoming recognizable.
You can have range and still have a voice. In fact, range might be part of your style. But if nobody can identify the through-line, if your work feels like a different person made it every time, it becomes harder for people to understand what you stand for creatively.
That does not mean you have to lock yourself into black and white portraits forever.
It means you have to make enough work that your point of view becomes visible across the range.
The goal is not sameness.
The goal is coherence.
You Cannot Be All Things to All People
This is one of the hardest lessons in creative work.
You cannot be all things to all people.
If you try, your work will suffer. Your energy will suffer. Your sense of self will suffer.
When you chase 58 different styles because you want everyone to like you, you dilute the very thing that makes your work valuable.
The goal is not to please everyone.
The goal is to express something true enough that the right people recognize it.
That takes courage because it means letting go of some possibilities. It means not being for every client, every audience, every trend, every platform, every room.
But that is also where freedom begins.
When you stop trying to be everything, you can finally become something specific.
And specific is powerful.
The Path Is Create, Share, Sustain
The loop is simple, but not easy:
Create. Share. Sustain. Get feedback. Make again.
That’s how you grow.
Not by waiting for clarity.
Not by endlessly planning.
Not by collecting inspiration forever.
Not by thinking your way into a fully formed identity.
You create.
You put work into the world.
You pay attention.
You learn.
You keep going.
Over time, that loop builds both style and mastery.
And here’s the advanced part: once you learn how to master one thing, you start to understand how learning itself works.
You begin to recognize the patterns of growth. You understand what deliberate practice feels like. You know how to move through frustration. You know how to close the creative gap.
Mastery in one area can become a doorway into mastery in others.
But first, you have to do the work in front of you.
The Core Idea
Your creative voice is not something you find by waiting.
It is something you uncover by making.
Your personal style is your point of view made visible. It is the creative fingerprint that appears when you have made enough work to stop performing and start revealing.
Yes, study the people you admire.
Yes, learn the tools.
Yes, imitate in the beginning.
Yes, experiment broadly.
But then return to the work.
Make one thing.
Then ten.
Then a hundred.
Look for the patterns. Trust what keeps showing up. Let your lived experience inform the choices. Stop trying to be all things to all people.
The world does not need a perfect copy of someone else.
It needs the thing only you can make.
Until next time: focus on the making, trust your point of view, and remember — your creative voice is already in there. The work is how you bring it out.










