On Tips’n Tricks to ‘take you photos to the next level’

By Andrea Monti

I recently asked a friend, who works on the editorial side of the music industry, to share his thoughts on one of my photographs taken during a flamenco concert. His response was a deep and thorough analysis, which I will spare the readers in full. In brief, however, he praised the lighting as particularly effective for flamenco photography, noting how the chiaroscuro effect recalls the classical paintings of Caravaggio. Regarding the composition, he observed that the bailaora’s body fills the frame dynamically, without ever feeling cramped. In his conclusion, he remarked that the image captures the very soul of flamenco. As flattering as this commentary was, I must admit that none of these considerations were consciously present at the moment of capture. Immersed in the flow of the music and the dance, I simply reacted instinctively when something “clicked” and I took the shot—just once, without resorting to burst mode.

This somewhat lengthy preamble serves to introduce the core topic of this article: the proliferation of ‘tips and tricks’ videos across content-sharing platforms, purporting to teach better composition, camera handling, lighting management, and so forth, with the subtle irony of claiming to be a ‘professional xx photographer’ (replace ‘xx’ with ‘sports’, ‘street’, ‘landscape’, etc.) while, instead, earning money by running a YouTube channel or social networking profile to ‘teach’ others how to take a photograph.

To be concise, my opinion—and I stress, it is my personal opinion—is that such material often works as a self-promotion (and monetisation) tool for those who make it. By contrast, it proves of limited use, and can even be detrimental to the development of a personal photographic style. This is why, as a rule of thumb, I label as ‘non interested’ every video where somebody tries to ‘sell’ a camera or pretend to ‘teach’ something while actually posing as the ‘smartguy’ in videos where he shoots random photos pretending to be an ‘expert’.

Readers who have had the patience to follow my previous posts on 35mmc will know that I firmly believe a good photograph is born not merely from technical proficiency, but above all from an educated mind—one that has absorbed, over countless hours, the aesthetic principles embodied by painters, sculptors, and architects. In other words, a photograph emerges from the synergistic interaction between the muscle memory needed to operate the camera effortlessly and the cultural depth that allows one to recognise “the moment”.

Certainly, rules must be learned before they can be broken. Guidance is necessary to avoid basic mistakes. However, the true innovation in photography rarely springs from the mechanical application of rules. Spending time seeking lines and composing frames without a cultivated sense of aesthetics may yield technically competent but emotionally sterile images.

Finally, I want to make it clear that my point has nothing to do with ‘perfection’ or ‘perfectionism’ as a goal in photography. I don’t really care about these ‘ultimate’ goals that can, allegedly, be achieved by following these online tips, because my focus is solely on personal improvement. What matters is not whether a photo wins an award in a competition or gets a bunch of likes on a social network. What matters is that it is better than the one I took yesterday and worse than the one I will take tomorrow.

Of course, the business side of this argument is quite different, but that is a topic for another post.

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About The Author

By Andrea Monti
My name is Andrea Monti. I’m an Italian free-lance journalist, photographer and – in my spare time – an hi-tech lawyer. The works I am more proud of are covering live jazz, pop and rock concerts for an Italian online music magazine and Opera and prose for a 200 years-old theatre. I also do sport photography mainly in athletics and fighting disciplines. You may find out more about me on https://andrea.monti.photography
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Comments

Gary Smith on On Tips’n Tricks to ‘take you photos to the next level’

Comment posted: 29/05/2025

Certainly, individuals who are regularly posting to YT (i.e.: they have a channel) are promoting themselves. In some cases, they are very targeted at a specific audience while in others they are simply shooting at a range of prospects. Some have something to offer, others are trying to sell you something. Some are sponsored.

You have quite a lot of experience with your target audience through your magazine affiliation. Was the above image published in one of those magazines? You asked a friend to comment on your image, you didn't ask me however, while I like the pose I wasn't thrilled with the lighting levels on the subject. Three minutes of edits fixed the image to better satisfy my taste.

In the end, it's all about personal taste.
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Ibraar Hussain on On Tips’n Tricks to ‘take you photos to the next level’

Comment posted: 29/05/2025

My eyes keep focussing on her assets - that’s all I can see! I

I agree with Gary above - some photographs are subjective, they invoke what one personally felt and may not be to others tastes, in whatever which way, as they weren’t there to experience it.

Sometimes I take pictures which I really like but never share as I know they won’t be appreciated nor liked
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Ibraar Hussain replied:

Comment posted: 29/05/2025

I would like to add that I agree with every point you made Andrea, there are many grifters on social media. It’s important to be self taught or to be taught some things - such as composition, tonal and colour relationships especially for B&W and of course camera and exposure basics

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Ibraar Hussain replied:

Comment posted: 29/05/2025

I think style matures and changes with age, experience and life changes, mood, mental state etc , rather than how one personally improves - well that's the case with myself.

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mike tynan on On Tips’n Tricks to ‘take you photos to the next level’

Comment posted: 30/05/2025

one aspect that you mentioned is what I learned from a boat builder when he answered a prospective buyer of a to be built wooden boat when the buyer tried to understand , define, and pin down the level of quality and workmanship that the builder would provide. the builder responded by having the buyer inspect the previous boat he just built. then the builder said that the new boat would be just a bit better, ... that was his standard of workmanship.... each boat just a bit better than the previous .
this is best metric of workmanship that I have run across.
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Louis A. Sousa on On Tips’n Tricks to ‘take you photos to the next level’

Comment posted: 30/05/2025

The responses follow with your train of thought. Your image provokes one to think creatively. I might edit the image to my personal taste but that is pointless. It is your image and your creative expression, not mine. You have succeeded in the core goal of fulfilling intent, instinctively. True dedication to the craft of photography nourishes instinct. A photographer's instinct pushes the eye to quell the hunger of creativity. In your image I see and feel pride, strength, grace, elegance and bravado. Thank you!
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Umberto Fracassi on On Tips’n Tricks to ‘take you photos to the next level’

Comment posted: 30/05/2025

Dear Andrea, I'd very much agree with the points the friend you consulted (and that you summarized here for us) raised and praised upon this photo: it is beautiful. It does possess soul, as much as the bailaora undeniably does. What a magical, piercing moment. Light was just beautiful, in fact, despite the fact that the hall must have been rather dark; I can almost imagine the cantaor somewhere else, offscreen yet onstage,
Que viva el flamenco!
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Alan on On Tips’n Tricks to ‘take you photos to the next level’

Comment posted: 02/06/2025

I learnt a new word: "chiaroscuro" effect. I can now put a name to those overly-dark images I see on Insta-waffle.
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David Hume replied:

Comment posted: 02/06/2025

Goodness Alan. I feel as though I need to say something about this comment, which I find lacking in respect and contributing nothing to the conversation except to highlight that, yes, learning what "chiaroscuro" means would benefit you. Your comment actually indicates you do not understand what it means, by the way, but I feel no need to be the one to enlighten you. I would offer, though, that learning about it would benefit anyone's photography.

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Alan replied:

Comment posted: 02/06/2025

My apologies. I should've been a touch more nuanced and thoughtful in writing my response. Disrespect yes, definitely towards Instagram. I think that is fair. It's a rubbish platform that in my opinion has damaged some aspects of popular photography. Chiaroscuro - you got me, fair cop. Never heard to the word before. Now I've learnt about it - and believe me I've now read quite a bit about it - I think it is easy to use this as a 'cheap' photographic trick - and actually quite difficult to get right. Though I believe the author of this article - Andrea - has intended to use this effect to bring drama to a dramatic subject. It's also pretty tough to put images up here on this website for potential critique. I'm sure, if I ever was allowed to put my images up on 35MMC, you might just shoot them down in flames. This said, Andrea's image above doesn't really do much for me, which could just be just my chiaroscuro-ignorant opinion. To my very limited eye, however, it looks somewhat like a slightly underexposed image, of a lady with an ample chest perhaps wearing a tracksuit top in a dark environment. Perhaps as a series taken from this flamenco event, it would work well. Put on its own, in my opinion, it isn't a particularly strong image, nor do I think this is a particularly good example of the chiaroscuro effect done well. In my opinion, it is unfortunate that the article is titled 'On Tips’n Tricks to ‘take you photos to the next level’' - because the title at least initially - gives the reader some impression that the author's practice exemplifies this stated aim. Fair play to Andrea for writing the article - better than I have done.

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Gary Smith replied:

Comment posted: 02/06/2025

No need to apologize Alan although your initial comment above could have easily ended with your first sentence. Also, we'd love for you to write up an article (or 2 or 3) and submit them to Hamish. That said, I agree with your sentiment: the photo (as posted) does nothing for me. Often photographs of performance art don't live up to the experience. I was however happy with edits that I made to see what life I could bring to an image where the subject does seem to get lost in obscurity. Wikipedia states that: "In art, chiaroscuro is the use of strong contrasts between light and dark, usually bold contrasts affecting a whole composition." and to my (admittedly poor) eyes, the photograph doesn't show bold contrasts between light and dark. Rather is shows complete darkness and a poorly illuminated subject. I feel that strengthening the contrast between the subject and background helps considerable and there are numerous s/w tools that can do a fine job.

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