Especially when you are just getting started,
coming back home to review your shots is one of the most exiting experiences,
but it can also be very frustrating. You where practicing your
manual focus skills and many are out of focus, you where trying to
set the correct settings and many of your photos look bad. Don't worry too
much about it that happens to all of us as we learn and get used to see
for the camera.
One thing that might get you down is when you
look at a picture that you like, only to realize that you would like to have
taken the picture closer or in a different angle, maybe you took it up side
down and now you are wondering if it would have looked better from a side.
Golden rule #2 might help, but here is another
one: Golden Rule #3: Be your worst critic.
Let's say you take a picture of a building, right in front if it. You will tell your self "This is awful you didn't got the top part of the building against that [beautiful | intimidating | colorful | aggressive] sky", now lay down on the sidewalk, make what ever you need to do to capture the building with the sky. Look again at your picture "Are you kidding me? This is the worst picture I have seen of this building. Didn't you notice the beautiful ornaments on the main entrance? You can't see any of that on this picture!" Now force your self to go a grab every outstanding detail on the building. Look again at your pictures and tell your self: "What is this???? This is one of the best locations in this town and there is not a single person walking by" and then "Why so many people??? I can't see the building due to all this people walking by"
Do you get the idea? We could also call this rule the "Be your own client" rule. Try to never walk away with only one angle of your subject, experiment, try new things, get out of the comfort zone, lay on the side walk, find a tree to climb, get on one knee, go to a side, go to the other, do anything and everything (legal … screw it even illegal just don’t get caught) to take the best possible picture of your subject.
When you shoot something think that probably it has been photograph thousands of times so, what can you do as a photographer to show that subject in a way no one has ever seen before.
You will be walking home not only with a huge possibility of getting "good side" of your subject but also with the possibility of creating beautiful compositions back home.