Stop Taking Random Photos and Create Something Meaningful
Aug 13, 2025
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We all know the thrill of capturing a perfect photo, the sun dipping behind a skyline, a fleeting smile, the shimmer of light on water. As photographers, we live for these moments. But sometimes these individual moments aren’t enough, and we need to tell a more meaningful story through our photography.
To do this, photographer Rebecca Kowalsky advocates creating photo essays that tell complete stories, rather than just a collection random individual images. This way you have a strong series that can tell a story, express an idea, or capture a mood.
What is a Photo Essay?
A photo essay is a collection of images that, when viewed together, convey a mood, idea, or narrative. It could be as few as six photos or as many as twenty, but what matters is the connection between them. That is, the way they build upon each other to tell a complete story.
Rebecca explains that even the most stunning single image might not fit into a photo essay on the same subject. A winning contest photo, for example, may not belong in a carefully curated series about a place or person. The magic lies in the cohesion of the group.
Types of Photo Essays
- Documentary Style – A day in your neighbourhood, a bustling market, or the rhythm of a city street.
- Poetic Style – Light filtering through windows, the haunting beauty of fog, or the textures of nature.
- Personal Stories – Ageing hands, a family ritual, or the quiet moments of a daily walk.
For Rebecca, one of her most cherished projects was a series on an ancient coastal city. Rather than just photographing the sea (a broad subject), she focused on the gritty, raw essence of the town, its weathered faces, crumbling walls, and the timelessness of its streets. By returning again and again, she uncovered layers of meaning that a single visit could never reveal.
Tips for Creating Your Own Photo Essay
Rebecca offers practical advice for photographers ready to go beyond casual snapshots:
1. Pick a Theme
Choose something small, specific, and emotionally meaningful. Instead of “Chicago,” photograph mornings in your hometown, like the people, the lakefront, the streets. Instead of “the sea,” focus on fishermen, shopkeepers, or coastal faces.
2. Plan Lightly
Don’t over-plan or create rigid shot lists. Instead, have an intention, imagine possible images, and explore both details and wide shots.
3. Return and Observe
Go multiple times, at different times of day, in different light, and in different areas. Patterns, moods, and stories emerge with repetition.
4. Curate with Heart
Select images that speak together, creating a series that flows. Thousands of shots may become just 20 carefully chosen photos. Keep reevaluating until the essay feels complete.
5. Focus on Meaning, Not Gear
You don’t need expensive equipment or perfect lighting. Curiosity, mindfulness, and intention are what transform your images into a story.
Your Next Challenge
Rebecca encourages photographers to pick one small subject (a street corner, a grocery store, a local riverbank), and photograph it with intention and care. Return multiple times, observe details, and let the images interact to tell a story. Share your results on social media or through personal projects.
Creating meaningful photos is about presence, curiosity, and intention. While spontaneous snapshots capture beauty, photo essays capture essence. Rebecca’s approach reminds photographers that every meaningful story begins with careful observation and a willingness to return, see more, and reflect. Watch the video below:
Alex Baker
Alex Baker is a portrait and lifestyle driven photographer based in Valencia, Spain. She works on a range of projects from commercial to fine art and has had work featured in publications such as The Daily Mail, Conde Nast Traveller and El Mundo, and has exhibited work across Europe





































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