Latest Posts

Glass – a new digital home for photographers?

When social media was born in the early 2000s, human connection, community, and discovery were at its core. In 2007 Facebook introduced the “like” button, starting its first experimentation with algorithms. Since then, they have been dictating what we see on our feeds and when we see it.

Born out of a frustration with this development, the increased preference for video, and ads taking up more and more space on other social media, Glass is offering to become the new home for photographers online. The photography-first app, which launched in August 2021, goes back to the basics of creating a photo-based community and shared creative space on the internet.

We spoke to Glass co-founder Tom Watson about what makes Glass special, what it can offer to photographers, and how they think about the future of the industry.

What is Glass?

We’re a photography community and platform. We have a few key differences from other platforms. No ads or algorithms, no invasive data-tracking, no public counts, no video, no outside investors telling us what to do. We forego all of that by charging a small membership fee of $5 USD a month or $30 USD a year. Oh, and a chronological feed. With a gorgeous (optional) public profile.

We wanted a space that listened to and was built for photographers, instead of using them to rapidly grow a platform and then pivot away from them because investors need a better return.

Why would a professional photographer join Glass?

We get this question framed in a different way all the time — ‘Why would I want to market to other photographers?’ And it’s such a sad way to frame the question because there’s so much more to photography and sharing it online than marketing. As Instagram shifted from sharing photos to becoming a full-blown marketing channel that only shows your work to 10% of your followers without dancing or paying, our behavior with sharing photography online shifted too.

The work you create for an algorithm is different from the work you create when you’re shooting for yourself. Growing as an artist requires experimentation. Glass is the spot for that experimentation.

Glass founders Tom Watson (left) and Stefan Borsje (right)

Glass founders Tom Watson (left) and Stefan Borsje (right).

Are there any well-known professionals on the platform?

Danielle Leong shared her work in progress on the way to her first gallery show. Om Malik joined Glass immediately after our launch even though he swore off joining another photography platform years ago. Artist-in-Residence at the National Academies of Sciences, Engineering and Medicine Christopher Michel has been sharing snapshots and stories from his travels. Sam Hurd, one of the best wedding photographers working today, recently shared some of his thoughts on Glass. I really loved this quote from his post:

“Eventually I realized I felt something I hadn’t felt since starting the blog on my own website… freedom. The freedom to post at 1am. The freedom to post at 9am. The freedom to post at 10pm.

The freedom to post whenever I wanted (with whatever caption I wanted) because there was no ghostly algorithm scooping me up with all the rest then measuring the performance of my content against some unknown metric.”

With being sincere and transparent on the app – including showing EXIF data – are pros giving away their secrets?

Sharing your EXIF data is optional — we only display what’s there. But one of our favorite things is members regularly sharing in their captions or the comments how they made the shot they’ve posted.

The gear or presets you use isn’t the thing that makes your work special. It’s you. It’s your eye. How you see the world, how you interact with your models, the intimacy you create, the light you catch.

The best chefs in the world write cookbooks with explicit instructions on how to make their most popular dishes from their restaurants. But their restaurants have reservations for months and months in advance. They don’t put themselves out of business by sharing their secrets. The secrets aren’t what make them great. It’s their skill and dedication to their craft. Photographers are the same way.

Can you explain this feeling of ‘purpose and calmness’ while being on the app?

Facebook and Instagram’s business model is built on engagement. How long can they hold your attention so they can sell it to a third party.

These choices introduce a scarcity mindset. There’s only so much time, only so much attention, to go around. It creates artificial conflict and comparison. But the greatest part of the internet is the abundance!

Interface of the photo-sharing app Glass

When I was designing Glass, I intentionally set out to build the opposite of a dopamine casino like Instagram. Glass is just edge-to-edge photos. No ads, no videos, no UX dark patterns making you click or shift your behavior. No addicting behavior built-in. It’s just photos in a chronological feed.

Which sounds simplistic, but it’s a really novel thing. It allows you to focus. Notice things you’d otherwise miss. Your good feelings are earned. It’s restorative rather than extractive. It’s inspiration instead of comparison. It’s a calm community instead of winner-take-all algorithm to game.

You mention ‘early Flickr’ in several interviews – can you explain what do you mean that? How is Glass bringing that back?

Every photographer online has had their heart broken by an app or platform they once loved. Depending on how long you’ve been posting photos online, it may be three or four. Flickr getting sold to Yahoo, a forum you loved shutting down, Instagram pivoting to video, whatever. For us, that moment was Flickr missing the boat on mobile. Flickr was the first time a global community of photographers got together to share online.

As the internet has grown over the years, we’ve gone from chronological feeds to endless algorithmic feeds. That shift has caused a noticeable difference in how we all interact with the internet. As algorithms took over and prioritized polarization and other’ing instead of real connection, we lost a human part of the internet. Internally, we call it an earnest internet. That’s what we’re trying to revive and help thrive.

It informs all the decisions we make. From deciding to not do ads or video, to skipping engagement algorithms or data-tracking. But also in how we built our business or prioritized launching with safety features such as blocking and reporting instead of more features.

The experience of Glass is vastly different from other social media apps; any recommendations on how to experience it the best?

Honestly, it’s really simple. Just comment on photos. Have conversations about a photo that caught your eye. Ask a question about composition or editing. Be open. Share. And above all, be kind.

When you’re used to other platforms providing little hits of dopamine at every turn and surfacing content tailored specifically to you and the decade’s worth of data it has on you, Glass can feel like work. It takes effort to build relationships. But the relationships you build are more rewarding, more honest, more direct. And that effort is worth it.

What is your vision for the future of photography? How is Glass going to be a part of it?

There has never been a better time to make photographs. But sometimes it can also feel like there’s never been a harder time to make a career out of photography.

It’s hard to overstate the seismic shifts that photography as an industry has gone through over the last three decades. Tumultuous changes and explosive growth. The death of Film. Digital cameras. Sharing photos online. Camera phones that are legitimately wonderful and affordable digital cameras. The reduction of local journalism across western countries. Pivots to video. And now AI technologies are popping up left and right that threaten our livelihood and the future of our industry.

Ad for the photo-sharing app Glass. Ad copy says: Ads & algorithms? No thanks

Any single one of these shifts would be considered world-shattering, let alone all of them. It’s hard to predict the future with how fast technology is moving right now, but a few things are timeless. Photography is best when shared. Art isn’t going anywhere and we’re seeing more solidarity among creators. Owning your audience and marketing channels is more important than ever. But investing in your craft and skill is just as important and it feels like that’s been lost in the last few years. We’ve been collectively shooting for an algorithm instead of ourselves.

As photography continues to be democratized, spending time honing your visual voice and point of view will be the thing that sets you apart. Glass is already a spot for photographers to experiment and grow in their work. The need for a space like this isn’t going away.

Sometimes an ‘Instagram killer app’ pops up within the photo community, but nothing had managed to create an exodus of photographers to a new platform just yet. Why do you think that is?

Instagram’s lack of a clear product vision and point of view is going to kill Instagram before another app does. Is endlessly scrolling video more addicting than endlessly scrolling photos? Apparently. But let’s not pretend like these weren’t clear UX decisions. The algorithm stopped showing people photos, but for six or twelve months there, everyone saw your story. Now you have to dance in a reel for someone to see it.

Our collective memory around Instagram seems to be stuck in 2015. But Instagram hasn’t served or helped photographers for nearly a decade. It’s increasingly difficult and erratic to use — folks spend hours every day trying to game an algorithm into showing their work to folks who already follow them in hopes that one of those people books them for a shoot. But it doesn’t work like that anymore. That version of Instagram, and the internet as a whole, isn’t coming back.

Instagram’s grip on the photography community feels absolute, but so did Facebook’s. So did Flickr’s. So did forums circa 1995. Photographers deserve better. But it requires a shift in how we think about funding internet businesses, how we use these platforms, and what we really need from them. It takes so much effort, so much energy, so much time, to build something new. Something different.

Glass isn’t just about showing off nice photos without ads. It’s about helping show that we can collectively build the internet that we want. That we deserve. An earnest internet. A kinder one. Instead of being built on outrage and addiction, we can build things that inspire and lift us up. It just takes a little effort and a little hope.

We hope you’ll join us.

 

Sign up to Glass using this link and get $10 off your yearly subscription

 


 

Sign up for the webinar

Images by Shravya Kag, Diana King and Tana Gandhi

3 photographers on how they found their creative voice

When everyone has a camera in their pocket, it is on you as a professional photographer to make your work stand out above the rest. As both a craft and a form of expression, developing a strong voice through your photography is key.

We spoke to three young photographers from Authority Collective – a group of womxn, non-binary and gender expansive people of color working towards more inclusivity in the photography, film and VR/AR industries – about how they found their own artistic expression and their best tips for making your work unique in both workflow and look.

Portrait of two women by documentary photographer Shravya Kag

Shravya Kag

Photo and video documentarian Shravya Kag treats the camera as an extension of herself. As a queer person of color, she navigates the terrain of human relationships by sharing mutual curiosity with her subjects.

Born and raised in India, but having lived in New York since 2015, Shravya draws on her own experiences to bring a unique outlook through her photos, which often revolve around questions of identity, home, and personal space.

“I deeply cherish the conversations with the collaborator before taking their portrait. Whenever time permits, I enjoy asking them how they like to be seen, what is their favorite angle, location, dress, etc., and observing how I see them with my tools, perceptions etc. It is a deeply intentional and meditative process that translates well to the final image.”

The intimacy between Shravya and her subject can be seen in both her personal projects and photo essays and her work for publications and brands like Vogue India, The New York Times and Urban Decay for their collaboration with the Stonewall Foundation.

Seeing patterns in her own style

Taking more time to archive and catalog her work, Shravya has been able to find patterns, see how her voice has developed, and discover ways to improve her work.

People making food in a dark kitchen, photo by Shravya Kag

“I am currently re-building my yearly catalogs with the final images from each assignment. I also have separate catalogs for larger personal projects, so I can view all the images photographed over the years in one catalog,” she explains.

“I’m yet to create the master catalog for all of my work — which is quite intimidating!”

Observe, read, and journal

Her tip to emerging photographers who are still trying to find their own voice is to look beyond the camera.

“Take long walks without any camera or phone to train the eye in observing composition and light. Read a wide range of topics — philosophy, culture, anthropology — to gain an understanding of yourself and your intentions in image making. Journal, journal, journal your thoughts and your responses to other photographic works.”

See more of Shravya’s work here.

RELATED: How Authority Collective is making photography more inclusive


Portrait of singer Mitski and filmmaker Ava DuVernay by photographer Diana King

Diana King

“It took me over 10 years to find my voice and I’m still learning, discovering, and developing my voice to this day,” says Diana King.

In the search for her personal tone of voice, the Chinese American portrait, lifestyle, and fashion photographer has built an impressive portfolio shooting for brands and publications like H&M, Samsung, and The Hollywood Reporter, taking portraits of both established and up-and-coming actors, artists, and creatives like Ava Duverney, Mitski, and Ariana DeBose.

“I found joy in taking close-ups and portraits. I loved the intimacy of connecting with my subject and capturing their personality,” she says, adding that she has spent a lot of time experimenting with lighting and color.

With her distinctly vibrant image style, she is able to use contrast and high saturation to draw out genuine emotion in her subjects. In the end, she describes her personal project ”Almost Asian, Almost American” as the place where she was truly able to find her voice.

“This project made me go outside of my comfort zone and find real women to interview and photograph,” she says.

“I discovered that I gravitated towards capturing these women in a certain way, which was confident and powerful. Creating an emotive connection is how I want my voice to be whenever I capture any subjects, whether they are models or real people.”

Stay organized

Like Shravya, Diana credits good organization with giving her an efficient workflow and creating a defined style.

“I created an organized naming system for each Capture One photo session in my archive so it’s easy for me to go back and find any job name and how I did the color grading and processing.”

Model in a pink dress sitting on an octopus sculpture, photo by Diana King

Diana has also set up templates for her color styles, image size exports, and metadata.

“These templates in Capture One are like automatic actions, which help me work faster and be consistent in my workflow as I don’t have to start from scratch and overthink the process whenever I start a new photo session.”

Play with light and color

“Experiment and discover what color tones you gravitate towards and learn how to color grade your photos. Learn to light if possible,” she says, encouraging emerging photographers to test shoot as much as possible.

“While being technical in all aspects of photography is not the most important thing, I think understanding what happens in all aspects of photography – from pre-production, shooting, to post-production – is important, so if you hire people to support you on a shoot, you learn how to direct and become a better photographer.”

Explore Diana’s work here


Still life image by Tana Gandhi

Tana Gandhi

“I love to explore different design and lighting styles, playful compositions and subtle pops of color which have helped me create a specific and cohesive look and feel,” says still life and commercial photographer Tana Gandhi about her style.

Getting inspiration from paintings and things she sees online, Tana uses a lot of graphic design with elements of play in her work. Experimenting with composition, shadows, and light, Tana captures memorable images even when working with a limited palette or minimalistic scenes.

“A game-changer”

As a still-life photographer, Tana takes advantage of some of the features in Capture One Pro that help shape her tableaus how she wants them.

“Working with Live View to build out still life photographs was the biggest game-changer.”

RELATED: Learn how to use Live View

“Working with producers, stylists, and retouchers has also given me the freedom to hone my work more and allows me time to continue testing and experimenting.”

Lemon drink on a table, GIF by Tana Gandhi

Reach out and connect

For Tana, putting energy into collaborating with other creatives is what brings her photography to the next level – artistically and commercially. She advises aspiring photographers to do the same.

“Keep taking pictures every single day. Keep reaching out to people and connecting. Understand the business side of things. You do it long enough – the taking pictures and connecting with people and finessing your business/marketing skills – you’ll be in good shape.”

Discover more of Tana’s work here


 

Are you new to Capture One? Try it for free here

Sign up for the webinar

Shoot tethered to Capture One for iPad

Get flexible with tethering for Capture One for iPad

Take your tethered setup on the go with Capture One for iPad. Now you can shoot your images directly into the iPad app tethered or wirelessly, letting you take your work wherever you want.

For travel and food photographer Ulf Svane having a simple and light setup is key when on the job for publications like National Geographic, Conde Nast Traveller, or Bloomberg. Especially when he is moving in-between locations. Join the Danish photographer around Copenhagen as he tests out the new tethering capabilities of Capture One for iPad to see what it does to his workflow.

Download Capture One for iPad to see how it can elevate the way you work


About tethering to Capture One for iPad

The professional choice on the go

Capture One Pro has long been the industry standard for fast and reliable capture directly from your camera to your computer. However, bringing along a laptop if you are shooting outside of a studio is not always practical.

With the new tethering capabilities in Capture One for iPad, you can travel lighter, move around easier, and collaborate better while still making sure you get the perfect shots.

By tethering to your iPad, you can instantly review your images in Capture One on a bigger screen. See the images in full resolution and check the focus, composition, or styling and make sure to get the image you want every time.

Check the focus, framing and make adjustments on the go with tethering for Capture One for iPad

Collaborate better on location

Even on shoots where a full tethering setup isn’t possible or convenient, you may still have clients, art directors, stylists, or subjects who need to review the photos to make sure they get the results they want.

With a lighter and more portable tethering setup on the iPad, your collaborators can keep an eye on the photos while you shoot and give you the space you need to do your thing.

Whether you are shooting wirelessly or tethered with a cable, giving your collaborators the chance to see your photos on a larger screen lets them be involved in the shoot and come with immediate feedback so that you can make corrections on the spot.

Deliver faster in time-sensitive jobs

Time is of the essence for many photographers when it comes to meeting client expectations. Save time and deliver your work quickly by shooting tethered to Capture One for iPad on those time sensitive jobs. With the images already in the app, you can make your selections, edits, and export to your client without sitting down at a computer.

RELATED: Learn how wedding photographer Alessandro Galatoli delivers quicker with Capture One for iPad

Make your selections, edit, and export to your clients all on Capture One for iPad

Wireless or cabled tethering?

Capture One for iPad now also supports wireless tethering for a number of cameras, letting you be even more flexible on your photoshoots. Get to those difficult spots and capture the perfect framing without worrying about your tethering cable holding you back, tripping you up, or disconnecting.

See which cameras are supported for wireless tethering to Capture One for iPad


Learn how to use tethering in Capture One for iPad here

Download Capture One for iPad to see how it can elevate the way you work


 

New to Capture One? Try it for free here

 


 

Sign up for the webinar