We’ve compiled a few ways to ensure you keep your photographic new year’s resolutions.

We all start January with the best of intentions, and it’s normally around a month later that those intentions fall to pieces. But it’s a shame to let your photography go the same way as your promise to go to the gym three times a week. So here are a few ways you can help yourself honour your intentions and take more photos in 2018…

1. Book a photo trip

Credit: Meditations/Pixabay

This doesn’t have to be something expensive – we’re not suggesting a photo week in Nepal. All you have to do is find a location you’d like to photograph, find a time you can go, and actually book yourself a ticket.

A train, a bus, even a night in a hotel if you can swing it – the point is to make a financial commitment so when the allotted weekend rolls around you don’t have an excuse to put it off. Get out and shoot something new!


2. Sign up to a project (publicly)

The best way to make sure you follow through on your resolutions is to make sure lots of other people know you’re doing it. Set yourself up for a little embarrassment if you fail.

With that in mind, the 365 project is a great way to publicise your photography intentions and have a little fun. There are different versions of these projects floating around the web, but the essential premise is the same – take a photo a day for 365 days.

Many of the challenges offer specific briefs to help spur your creativity, and there are hashtags on Twitter and Instagram where you can show off your work to other people attempting the challenge. Think about it – if you finish either project successfully, or even just make a decent fist of it, you’ve got the raw material for your first photobook!

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3. Make a calendar of competitions, and keep to the deadlines

There is never a shortage of competitions for amateur photographers to enter. Most of the big competitions are open to everyone regardless of experience – Landscape Photographer of the Year, Wildlife Photographer of the Year and Travel Photographer of the Year are all open to everyone. Some awards keep separate categories for non-pros, such as the Sony World Photography Awards Open Competition.

Have a look at the competition websites and write down the deadlines in your calendar so you’ve got plenty of time in advance, and stick to them. Make a plan for your year.


4. Join a club (online or off)

Search for camera clubs where you live – there’s more than likely to be one. If you’re at college or university there will almost certainly be one. Express an interest and show up to a meeting – you may or may not find it’s for you, but having a group of people to show your photos to on a regular basis will definitely spur you on to create more. Also look online – Flickr groups are a good place to start if you want to find people who share your photographic interests.


5. Get involved with APOY

APOY 2017

We’d be remiss if we didn’t mention our own competition. Amateur Photographer of the Year is our in-house photo competition especially for amateurs. Every round provides the opportunity to win a prize and accumulate points, and the photographer with the most points at the end of the year wins the grand title.

We have different rounds covering a range of genres, so you’ll have opportunities both to play to your strengths and try something new. Don’t feel intimidated either – you wouldn’t believe how often we see our monthly winners commenting that this is the first time they’ve entered a photo competition.


6. Try a day course or workshop

There are plenty of ways to improve your photography and inspire yourself without committing large amounts of time or money. Day courses and workshops are perfect ways to galvanise yourself and pick up a few tips from a pro photographer. Whatever genre you’re interested in, there will be short courses that will make you better at it.


7. Sort out your social media

Another way to make sure lots of people know about your resolution to take more photos is to finally sort out a space for your photography on social media, like you first told yourself you would back in 2015. Set up dedicated Facebook and Twitter pages for your photos and regularly update them with your adventures, especially if you’re doing a project like the 365. Here are some pointers for bettering your experience on Twitter and Facebook.


8. Don’t give up!

Finally, remember, whatever you rashly promised yourself you can do, you can do it! For instance, our goal was to make it through this entire post without making a pun on the word ‘resolution’. And we didn’t. If we can achieve things, so can you.


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