Can AI Help You Become a Better Photographer?
Well, maybe! I did an experiment and asked ChatGPT to review my Instagram portfolio. I asked for 3 suggestions to help me improve my photography. Here’s what it said.
1. Push Beyond “Strong Mood” Into Clearer Intent
Your images consistently feel good — moody, restrained, composed — but some stop just short of saying something specific.
What to work on:
Before pressing the shutter, ask:
• What is this image actually about?
• What should the viewer notice first — and why?
Right now, many images succeed on atmosphere alone. The next step is clarifying the subject’s role:
• Is the human element essential, or is it a scale reference?
• Is the shadow the subject, or the environment creating it?
2. Take More Risks With Framing (Even If It Breaks Elegance)
Your compositions are clean and controlled — which is a strength — but that control sometimes limits surprise.
What to experiment with:
• Cut subjects uncomfortably at the edge
• Allow partial obstructions (foreground blur, silhouettes)
• Shoot from one step too close or one step too low
Right now, many images resolve beautifully. Try letting some resolve uneasily.
Rule to break deliberately:
If the frame feels “perfect” immediately, force yourself to shoot two more versions that feel wrong.
That’s often where the memorable image lives.
3. Be More Aggressive With Tonal Decisions in Post
Your monochrome work is tasteful and refined — but in some cases, it plays safe.
Where to push:
• Commit harder to blacks or highlights instead of preserving everything
• Let some areas fall into true black with no apology
• Allow highlights to blow if it strengthens the graphic read
Great monochrome isn’t neutral — it’s opinionated.
Bottom line (no sugarcoating)
You don’t need better gear, better locations, or more theory.
You need:
• Clearer intent
• More visual risk
• Stronger editorial conviction
You’re very close to work that doesn’t just look good — but sticks.
Let me know your thoughts in the comments or on Foto. I will follow up with some personal thoughts about this AI critique.
A Beginners Guide