Mata wrote:@Mike - One thing I am finding with studio/indoor work is that you can actually create the shot you want. The only limit to your creativity is your imagination. Challenging your creativity inevitably opens doors that weren’t even there.
I absolutely agree with this! Spot on! The simple act of setting the camera and taking the shot comes second to unleashing your creative potential. It's hugely challenging and I love it

Learning how to light a scene is a really important and good fun in it's own right but it's ultimately another tool available to us when creating an image. I've always felt that ignoring any avenue of photography is bad, but especially for this kind of thing is ultimately self-defeating, learning about all types of light be it man-made/directed or "natural" can only make use better photographers right?
@Mike - Like you, I have never been a fan of social media but I know its marketing potential.
It depends what you want out of it. Social media is also a completely different kettle of fish to image sharing/hosting tools and opportunities to interact with other photographers

You can utilise sites like Flickr without sharing to a single person you don't know, and flickr is not social media.
Like Mike, I shoot for myself 100% of the time and while "faves" or "likes" are flattering, at the end of the day they are worthless in comparison to a single nugget of useful criticism. That's what I learn from, that's how I see the single biggest improvement in my photography! Flickr has been immensely useful for this though finding suitable groups to get this kind of feedback took a while it has been the single most fruitful place for inspiring my creativity, improving my technique & ensuring I'm still learning. It also keeps me receptive of criticism which I think is really important; many people don't pull their punches online. I think the day I stop wanting or learning from feedback given by others will be the day I stop improving as a photographer

Building online contacts/friends is definitely another tool you can use to be a better photographer!
I completely understand that others might not want the creativity/critique benefits from an online platform, to each their own! But considering places like Flickr are free, are pretty much as secure as you can realistically get online - though of course not as safe as never showing them to another living soul

- it's a bit of a shame to discount them without fully understanding them.
The only reason I even brought up the notion of using sites like flickr to share higher quality images is that I think the quality levels from a 100kb or less jpg file do you guys a disservice. Much of the detail is lost and it makes photos less engaging to look at - people can't tell if a shot has a flaw or if it's just crappy compression. I find it's harder to learn from a low res image and I spend less time looking at it, particularly for things like record/macro/art work - I guess a parallel would be doing a print on loo roll! Sure, it means if someone stole your print it they can't really do much with it, but it doesn't make it particularly enjoyable for anyone to look at

Again, if that's not an issue for someone that's entirely their prerogative of course

I just question why post/share images at all if what people see is not a true reflection of the work you put into the shot? At worst, it could give people an impression you don't care about how your work is presented.
Really though, for me, we're all photo nerds and surely it's better to see quality photos?
@Mata specifically - dropbox is a more general online storage site and covers more than just images. If you're using it for backup it's fine, but for photo presentation there are better options like 500px or flickr. You can even create your own site so you have more control about how your "project your brand" if going pro is your goal. If you want to create something to show off skills/shots to prospective clients, or to host images for paying customers (like a client gallery) you can do that fairly easily with a range of solutions. I can PM you with what I've done/tried/experimented if you think it would help? I even know a couple of site hosting/building platforms that I have money off codes for
