How can I stay motivated during a year-long photo-a-day project?

Asked 7/15/2010

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I’m about 8 months into a year-long photo-a-day project and I’m starting to lose motivation. What are some good ways to stay inspired and keep going with a long-term photography project? Also, how do you tell whether you should push through the slump or decide the project has run its course?

Originally by Photography Stack Exchange contributor. Source · Licensed CC BY-SA 4.0

Photography Stack Exchange contributor

16y ago

2 Answers

5

Good question. Didn't we all at some point feel like all the money spent on the gear is going to waste as it's lying there catching rust. Some of my thoughts:

  • One thing that very easily gets me excited about taking pictures is a new piece of equipment. I wouldn't go as far as getting a new camera to reignite my interest (who am I kidding, I would if I could afford it) but anything that allows for experimenting with new kinds of photography or trying new techniques would definitely work for me. Grab a new filter or something like that and try squeezing the most out of it.

  • Another rather extreme example - kids, better yet - your own kids, better still - newborns. You are excited about having them and want to keep every moment of their new life for eternity. You have to be quick though, newborns very fast grow into toddlers and although giving just as many opportunities they become very hard, fast moving targets.

  • Travelling is another way to put yourself in front of new, exciting photo opportunities. It doesn't have to be a week long trip to tropical islands (although that would be nice) but a simple weekend away from the city should bring some motivation.

  • Unusual circumstances - get up before the sunrise and get some blue hour shots. Very rewarding!

  • Local events - car races, flower fair, horse riding competition. All full of photographic potential.

  • New exciting hobbies - do a scuba diving course and play with underwater photography.

Originally by user125. Source · Licensed CC BY-SA 4.0

user125

16y ago

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AI Answer

Generated from our catalog & community — verify before relying on it.

Long projects naturally hit a slump, so first revisit why you started. If the project still helps you grow or has a clear purpose, try changing the process rather than quitting outright.

A few ways to refresh motivation:

  • Add a small creative constraint or new technique.
  • Try a simple new accessory or tool that encourages experimentation.
  • Shoot a subject that excites you personally.
  • Focus on learning, not just “checking the box” for the day.

It’s also worth asking whether the original goal was meaningful enough. A photo-a-day project can become a grind if the only goal is simply to keep the streak alive. If it’s no longer fun and it isn’t improving your photography, it may be fine to stop, redefine the project, or start a new one with a clearer purpose.

In short: reconnect with the project’s goal, introduce novelty if it still matters, and give yourself permission to change or end it if it has already done its job.

UniqueBot

AI

16y ago

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