Ever since I can remember i’ve always been fascinated with the design of cars. I just love the aesthetics of them. The way the look, the emotion they give off, the differences in them, what they say by their looks.
Of course the older cars are more interesting to look at and from a design perspective. To be honest, I really couldn’t care less about the engineering and what’s under the bonnet or how they work. I just love looking at them.
I’ve been photographing classic cars in the same way since 2014 on my phone and posting them to Instagram and calling it #ishootcars. With a bit of time on my hands, I thought i’d have a quick search of my photos on my phone and put together a collection of them. (I don’t think this is all of them, but it is most).
I tend to shoot the cars for this makeshift project when i’m out on my bike or driving around. I’ve been known to pull over and run after a car if it’s really special. Or chase them down in traffic. There are a few rules I set my self for the project, like always shooting from the side. Try to get low down. Usually a car before 1990. Sometimes a car after 1990 if it’s really special or personal to me. Always on my phone.
So there you have it, 6 years of shooting cars and a morning going through my phone.
Hope you’re all keeping safe and sane.
Much love
Adam
How I create Instagram content for business
How I create Instagram content for business
Read MoreWhy I’m changing how I use Instagram
Why I’m changing how I use Instagram
I’ve really started to think long and hard about how I use the wonderful photo sharing app Instagram. The world of photography has changed a hell of a lot in the last few years and it’s got me thinking.
So as a bit of a background my profile on Instagram says: “I shoot people. Usually for work. Always for fun. ——— All photos are taken on an iPhone.”
Flickr
Back in the day I was a massive fan of a photography sharing website called Flickr. You may have heard of it? But do you use it to share your photos?
I don’t any more. I used to on a daily basis. In fact I was on there before I was on Facebook and used it so much, that I thought what’s the point of this new fangled Facebook with Flickr being so popular.
Well around 2009 I just found that Flickr died a death. I used to do a 365 Day Self Portrait project and my photography was regularly getting loads of hits a day and seen by so many people. But that just stopped. I wasn’t checking it as much and chances are all those other people weren’t.
Where do I upload my photography to now?
Well I put a very limited amount of family and friends stuff on Facebook. My wedding photography goes on my wedding photography website www.vivaweddingphotography.com and my commercial photography goes on my commercial photography website www.adambronkhorst.com. The final bit of the puzzle is my iPhone snaps of everyday life. Well that goes on Instagram.
I suppose there isn’t one place where you can see all my photography. Well all the stuff that i’m proud off and want to show off. This all seems a bit fragmented. After all i’m a photographer and I use the same creative vision no matter what i’m shooting. So it seems only sensible to have somewhere to use as a photography sharing platform for all the best bits.
Onto Instagram. I joined and started uploading iPhone photos to Instagram back in 2010. I’ve only ever uploaded photos which were taken on my iPhone. I thought that it’s a mobile photography platform to be used and viewed on a mobile device. So I used to be all snobby and couldn’t understand why people would upload anything else.
I once wrote a book on ‘Smartphone Photography’ called Snap Shots. I looked at apps for shooting, apps for editing and apps for sharing. Instagram does all three of those in one app. It’s just brilliant. The fact that I don’t shoot or edit with it doesn’t matter. I do share my photos with it and whats more it’s not just an app for sharing your photos on other sites. It’s an amazing social network.
And thats the key. It’s a social network. It’s been embraced my so many photographers to show off their work and so much more. Why am I not using this? Why am I just using it to show, what is for me, the least interesting of my photography? And by that I mean the photos I put the least effort and thought into?
Instagram is so much more than just a photo taking app. It’s become the place to view photographers work. I don’t have to just put my iPhone photos up there. I can share my commercial portrait work. I can put the odd wedding photo on there. I can also put my family and friends stuff up there and everyone can see it all in one place. It’s my photography and my style will hopefully be obvious in all my work. Why limit myself?
The plan
So from now on my Instagram account is going to look very different. There’ll be a load of other work on there for everyone too see. I’ll still post the iPhone photography. But i’ll keep that to Square and i’ll tag it with #iPhone. After all the best camera is the camera you have with you. I still love shooting with my iPhone, so that’ll never stop.
I’m hoping that it’ll open up my photography to a whole new audience and people that liked my wedding photography can see that I love commercial portraits. And people that love my commercial work can see that I put just as much effort into shooting my family and friends and you never know where things will lead. I’ve seen some amazing things happen on Instagram so i’m embracing change.
So it looks like Flickr is alive and well now; it’s just called Instagram and everyone has it in their pocket.
I’m also going to change my profile and remove that snobby saying “All photos taken on an iPhone”.
Adam Bronkhorst’s Instagram Account is dead. Long live Adam Bronkhorst’s Instagram Account.