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    Flickr Changes Lives, Launches Photog Careers

    by Jennifer Woodard Maderazo
    August 2, 2007

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    With the plethora of social networking sites, it’s easy to come to the quick conclusion that what we are doing on these sites — chatting up strangers, lurking on people’s profiles, spying on friends — is just a waste of time. But there is one site that is more than just an unhealthy habit: Photo-sharing site Flickr is a photography school, art gallery and a sandbox for experimentation. On Flickr, bad photographers get schooled, mediocre ones get better and some even rise to the top as stars — all supported by an immense, and sometimes intimate, international community.

    When Flickr founders Caterina Fake and Stewart Butterfield launched Flickr in 2004 they could not have expected the level of success it’s enjoyed among its users. There were already many other photo-sharing sites out there — among them Yahoo Photos, which would later be replaced by Flickr after Yahoo purchased the site. But none really had the ease of use and the kind of community tools that Flickr offered.

    The way Flickr is designed makes discovering new images and new people easy and even fun. Thousands of images are uploaded from around the world every minute, and refreshing the homepage gives you access to random photos you might never have found through a search. Serendipitous encounters also happen by clicking on tags made by users on a photo. Click on the globe icon next to the tag pizza and get ready for a trip around the world via over 70,000 photos from people everywhere. In a way, these tags allow you to see other people’s take on something that’s familiar to you, which can be surprising and fascinating.

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    I’m an art school veteran, and I know the pain of feeling discouraged about my work by the scrutinizing eyes of academia. When I was in film school, I came to hate photography class because of the way it was taught: hours and hours of theory, playing with light meters, then back to the dark room to see how things came out. Though I had a love for images, try as I might, I couldn’t absorb the information I needed to create beautiful ones. I also didn’t find out that my images were less than perfect until I developed and printed them, which was often a moment of dread. I thought I was a rotten photographer.

    After film school I put down the film camera for many years, then in 2005 picked up a cheap digital point-and-shoot. I began uploading careless, admittedly ugly images to a fairly new site called Flickr, mainly to share photos with friends and family. As I did that, I perused other people’s photos, and began to make contact with the people behind the images. My contact base grew as people began to comment on my images and vice versa. Before I knew it, I was beginning to care more about the quality of my photos. I looked at my contacts’ work and wondered, “what kind of camera did they use?” and “how can I get my photos to look like that?” Involuntarily I began learning on Flickr all that I didn’t in my classes, and I gained something beyond technique: a renewed passion for picture-taking.

    From Point-and-Shoot to Photo Studio

    And I’m not the only one who started learning more from Flickr. Roughly one year ago Flickr user Laretta Houston uploaded her first image onto the service, taken with a point-and-shoot camera. She describes the progression from amateur to pro in a series of milestones: “March 2006 – Bought a cheap DSLR camera…October 2006 – My first gig with Lupe Fiasco…” Today, she’s set up her own studio and is working as a photographer. After one year, a total transformation has taken place, and Houston isn’t alone. There are so many cases of “Joe Schmo to pro” (or at least semi-pro) on Flickr that they’ve almost stopped surprising me.

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    Daniel Krieger

    A contact of mine, Brooklyn-based photographer Daniel Krieger (known as Smoothdude on Flickr) is another success story. He told me that this progression of nobody to somebody in photographic terms is one of the things that make Flickr so special for him. “Being able to watch some regular Joe Schmo buy a camera, hop on Flickr, and develop into a talented photographer with a vision is something revolutionary in the art world, I would say. I don’t think there’s ever been anything like that.”

    While that kind of transformation doesn’t happen overnight, in some cases Flickr facilitates and speeds the learning process. Just how one learns on Flickr is really up to the individual, and the process often happens accidentally. When you see a really striking photo, you might ask the photographer how he or she managed it. If you are starting basically from zero, as I was when I joined, you might have lots of questions about lenses, exposure, shutter speed and the like. Flickr users love to give advice, and sometimes you don’t have to ask — others do the asking for you. When Daniel Krieger uploaded a series of really spectacular wedding shots, many users began asking him what techniques he used to shoot them. I made notes on some of his tips for future reference, and that’s how many Flickr photographers learn how to improve their craft.

    Krieger himself began like so many others on Flickr, just uploading a few photos to share with others. He joined in January 2005 and says he learned 85% of what he knows about photography from Flickr. That knowledge, gained from peer feedback and the work of the greater Flickr community, has helped make him what he is today: a working professional photographer. Krieger tells me he has several assignments every week and his name is featured on the masthead of a publication.

    Support Groups for Photogs

    Flickr user Diyosa Carter is a working mom and budding photographer. She began uploading images on Flickr as a way to share pictures of her children with family and friends, but eventually became hooked on the community aspect of the site. “Much of my photography knowledge can be credited to Flickr,” she said. “Through contacts and various groups I understand more about photography and my camera than I could have ever imagined.”

    Diyosa recently had one of her images selected for a charity auction celebrating Flickr’s third birthday, and her experience on the site is helping her see her work in a different light. “Flickr has made me see photography as a potential career opportunity for myself,” she said. “Also, in my day-to-day job I have taken on the role of photographer at our events more seriously, seeing them as a form of experience or even portfolio-building opportunities.”

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    On Flickr, there are also groups built around certain styles of photography, technique or even lenses. If you are primarily a landscape photographer and are interested in breaking into portraits, there are plenty of groups on the site where you can get advice and guidance from people already working in that area. And since Flickr is made up of amateurs and professional photographers alike (and everything in between), the person with the photo next to you could become a sort of an online mentor.

    Flickr is truly changing the way photographers learn, work and get discovered. And it’s changed me, too. The site and the community on Flickr have made a tangible and positive impact on my life. I too have gone from playing around with photography to getting real work and beginning to take my pictures seriously. Like many other users, in the Flickr community I’ve found a gallery, a school and a marketplace all in one place. Not bad for $24.95 per year.

    What do you think of Flickr? What are the best aspects of the community, and what could be improved? What other photo-sharing sites do you use? Share your thoughts in the comments below.

    Jennifer Woodard Maderazo is the associate editor of PBS MediaShift. She is a San Francisco-based writer, blogger and marketer, who covers Latino marketing at Latin-Know and Latino cultural issues at VivirLatino.

    Flickr water photo by Lali Masriera Arnau.

    Tagged: flickr photography social networking teaching tools

    23 responses to “Flickr Changes Lives, Launches Photog Careers”

    1. Kristen says:

      Jennifer, great post.

      I agree that the Flickr community is powerful–it combines the surprise and discovery with the “Everyone’s Photos” section at the bottom of your personal page, the curation aspect with the Flickr label of “interestingness,” and a simple interface.

      We’re starting to see some reallly interesting apps being built with the Flickr API; I really like pictobrowser (built on the Flickr API) for pulling feeds out .

      My favorite part of Flickr is the increase in connections I have made, often by tagging my own photos and searching for others; I’m inspired by the community and excited to see where my Flickr journey takes me too…

    2. Marcy says:

      I love Flickr because I can post new photos that might not go into my pro website but still warrant being online for friends and colleagues.

      Also – it IS a wonderful sounding board for trying out new styles and being inspired.

      In addition, if I am shooting an event almost all the other photogs post their pics into Flickr as well so I can see how others viewed the same happening.

      And of course for posting my favorite pics from vacation: http://flickr.com/photos/mmendelson

    3. Elinesca says:

      Not to mention the fantastic and creative DMU group which I believe Smoothdude wants to credit as his first meeting with real time photography!

      :-)

    4. That smoothdude is one handsome chap

      -smoothdude

    5. Szooey says:

      Flickr is by far my favorite photo site. It does change lives – I use it as a research tool for image searches, I use it to find like-minded individuals with similar hobbies such as rock climbing and travel, and I use it to find inspiration. I am more interested in getting Flickr updates from my friends than blog updates of friends. Maybe I’m just more visual, but Flickr has always provided a great user experience, and has always proven to be useful and relevant to me in my life.

    6. Yes!!! way to go smoothdude!

    7. Nat Hamlin says:

      Smoothdude and I have an ersatz sibling rivalry going on in the Del*te ME! Uncensored group on Flickr.

      I think all that poking and proding keeps us both on our toes as far as looking honestly at the pictures we post.

      I can learn more about a shot posted to the DMU pool in 24 hours than I learned sitting in a photog classroom for a full semester.

      Oh sure, sometimes it hurts, but it doesn’t cost anything and I get to hurt back. LOL

    8. faye says:

      I’m very new to flicker. I wanted to share my photos so others would see my shop.
      My shop consist of art my daughter has drew and other art that i have received through photos.
      We sell t shirts,tank tops,hoodies,baby and toddler apperal,office supplies including clocks,posters,stickers,magnets,birthday and other holiday gifts and much more.

    9. Totally agree. Excellent post.

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    11. yes, I agree with you, but if you find another site like flicker, please tell me.
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    18. flickr is not that good as there are better sites out there and is just basically getting annonying now is anotehr way to get you hooked on wasting your life, socialising websites are not good any more. thank you very nice article..

    19. flickr is not that good as there are better sites out there and is just basically getting annonying now is anotehr way to get you hooked on wasting your life, socialising websites are not good any more. Thank you very nice article..

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