You snap a pic, go home, edit it, and it turns out great! But what do you do next? How do you share it? Do you upload it somewhere?

  • They get saved on a hard drive and backed up to an off-site server. I can then enjoy them from any device anywhere, and can show people if they’re interested. I don’t share them or post them publicly. People don’t care and I don’t need validation from others to take more photos.

  • They sit on a hard drive, on another hard drive, on a usb drive, and I might start burning DVDs too, just for the hell of it.

    Since it would be a shame if they sit there without anyone ever seeing them, I post on Pixelfed every now and then.

  • I have a shared Apple photos album with my dad and occasionally share with a small handful of friends on discord or on a Pixelfed with zero followers for the sake of having them somewhere that isn’t my apple photos album.

    I’ve had a very small handful printed as Shutterfly’s metal photo tiles, and I thought they did a pretty good job (though the mounting was not sufficient for a textured wall paint).

  • I sometimes upload photos to my Pixelfed account. I also participate in the 52frames.com weekly challenge, so I frequently post there as well.

    But recently I also started posting to my own dedicated photo site. It’s … more meaningful to me, and I can share the posts with some community (52frames mentioned above has an active Discord server, also “Focal Point with C. London” as well).

    A note on my own site: I’m a techie and tend to obsess about loading times and static site generators and all that - so I end up with a typical software developer’s blog - blogging about how to setup the blog itself. So for this thing I said, “I don’t care about performance, SEO, anything. I’ll just post photos”.

    So if you plan to do something like that, I suggest just going for it. Just pick a platform and start posting. After a time, you’ll figure out what you want to do, in which direction to move, so can adjust later. But just getting started should be easy, and it motivates you a lot.

  • I make photo albums of a selection of all the photos I take and then show it to anyone who wants to see it. During holidays I also take video, and then combine those clips with photos into a home video. I have printed some photos to hang on the wall, so my home is filled with my own photos. I have some as desktop wallpaper. Lately, I make theme photo albums. I have one with all the different birds I have photographed and one with all my prettiest photos.

  • If I like it enough (not often), I’ll share it on Glass. If I really like it (less often), I’ll print it out to hang on the wall. Most of the time they just get uploaded to iCloud so I can view them on my phone and iPad. I’ve printed a photobook once a long time ago; I’m working on another.

  • Everything goes on a hard drive, then backed up. The best ones get put into folders on my NextCloud where my family can see them.

    If I want to make one public, such as a particularly good cat picture, I may post it on Pixelfed.