Learn how to use other people’s photos as inspiration and copy them uniquely and fairly

 
 

THIS WORKSHOP IS ABOUT LEARNING HOW TO CREATE VERSIONs of other people’s photos THAT YOU LIKE EVEN MORE than the ORIGINAL!

 

 


 
 

Learn how to creatively copy other photographers work in a creative and entirely fair way.



You've probably noticed that there are images you feel totally attracted to - to the point of wishing whole-heartedly that you'd created them yourself and there are others which you acknowledge as being excellent, but to which you feel absolutely no connection.



Every image that you feel connected to is already a part of your DNA. It resonates entirely with you.



It's these images that will come together and help you create your own style of photography. Individual elements of each of the image looks you desire will come together and give your images their YOU-ness.



But 

  • What do you copy?

  • Why do you copy? 

  • And how do you copy?



Because when it comes down to it, copying can either feel absolutely right or incredibly icky.



In this workshop I'm going to be teaching you how to creatively break down photos in order to copy their characteristics  and help you tweak them so that they suit your style and don't look like copies.

 
 

"Start copying what you love. Copy, copy, copy, copy. At the end, you will find yourself" - Yohji Yamamoto


This is what you’ll learn:

❤️ Which kind of images you like and what you (probably) like about them.

❤️ How to break down a photo into individual elements.

❤️ How to detect which elements to which you feel most drawn.

❤️ How to tweak the way you photograph the image of your desire so that it suits your style and taste.

❤️ How to blend all your new ideas together to create your own style of photography.

This workshop is fun, hands-on, fast-paced (for quick success) and the lessons are set in easily understandable and logical way.

 

Would you like to get lifetime access for only $69 and start creating photos like those of the photographers you admire most today?