5 Things Every Outdoor Photographer Should Do

Whether you're a landscape photographer, street photographer, or something more niche, there are best practices for all photographers. Here are five things every outdoor photographer ought to do.

We have all made embarrassing mistakes when it comes to photography. In the early days of my time with a camera in my hands, almost all of my errors could be traced back to a lack of planning. In this video, James Popsys goes through five things he thinks every outdoor photographer should do, though it applies to most genres. The one that resonated with me the most — for reasons just explained — is preparation.

I've never had a horror story in any paid job when it comes to preparation — perhaps I'm more careful with those, or perhaps it's because I didn't take paid work on until later in my photographer life — but I've had a few in personal shooting. I've traveled two hours to an interesting and relatively unknown location, only to find my card was still in my card reader. I've set out for a well-planned shoot with a camera I was reviewing to photograph a steam train at sunrise, only to arrive and realize as I waited for the moment that I had taken the battery out to write down its spec. I have gone out at 3 am to take some astrophotography images, only to find when I'm sitting shivering in the dewy grass that I hadn't packed my tripod quick-release plate.

All of these mistakes were made reasonably early on for me, and that might have been for the best as I now prepare to a bizarre degree. But if I were to highlight the most important moves outdoor photographers ought to make, it is careful and thorough preparation.

Rob Baggs's picture

Robert K Baggs is a professional portrait and commercial photographer, educator, and consultant from England. Robert has a First-Class degree in Philosophy and a Master's by Research. In 2015 Robert's work on plagiarism in photography was published as part of several universities' photography degree syllabuses.

Log in or register to post comments
4 Comments

Robert Baggs, you never even said what the 5 things are.

I am certainly not going to click on a video that Fstoppers has linked to. Not ever. You need to write the article in a complete fashion, as though the reader has only your article, because many of us are very resistant to clicking on these YouTube videos that the articles are about.

I read your entire article, and yet I don't even know what these 5 things are. That's right - not even the title itself is fulfilled in the article. I am disappointed.

They are James Popsys' 5 ideas, not Robert's. That's why. This is the internet, links to give credit where credit is due.

He always has such a pained expression.

Really entertaining video - I like it. Concerning your offspring here's my personal advice: do not take it too seriously. It will be a toddler, not a grenade going to explode. All the best!