Everyone gets stuck in a rut once in a while. Sometimes it can be difficult to find your way back on the creative path again.
Here are 10 ways to kickstart (and maintain) your creativity.
1. Journal
Get yourself a notebook and start journaling. I use a small notebook because it is easy to carry with me wherever I go, but any notebook will do. Some people like to use bigger notebooks with lots of space on each page, but I find it limits me in always carrying it with me.
Write down your ideas, dreams, problems, visions, compositions and rambling thoughts as they come to mind. Don’t delay, because thoughts are often very fleeting.
I use the legendary Moleskine ruled pocket notebooks for my journaling together with this very cool and compact Ion Gel Ink Cross pen. Both work great for me as I can carry them with me anywhere.
2. Fresh Input
The mind needs stimulation. Your sensory input gets stored in memory. By giving your mind fresh inputs on a daily basis your memories get triggered and combined with the new input. This can help generate new ideas and new perspectives.
How do you get new input? Do something new each day. Listen to different radio stations, take a new route to work or when you walk the dog, read or borrow different books or magazines, take a stroll through a shopping centre. Keep your eyes and ears open – and taste, touch and smell things.
3. Relax and Unwind
Listen to music while lying on the floor. Sit outside in the sunshine and do nothing. Lie in the green grass and look at the clouds drift by. Take a stroll, ride your bike or go for a swim. It’s important to give yourself some down time where you can unwind and let your subconscious mind do its work. Getting new ideas in the shower or while you are driving may sound like a cliché, but it happens all the time.

Find your way back on the creative path. Image by Thomas Folke Andersen
4. Learn to Draw
Use Betty Edwards’ book Drawing on the Right Side of the Brain to teach yourself to draw. It’s a wonderful book and you will learn skills applicable to problem solving and enhancing your perception of the world. In fact many of the techniques discussed in ‘Drawing on the Right Side of the Brain’ applies to photography as well.
5. Associational Thinking
The mind stores information by association. The inputs described under ‘Fresh Input’ above can trigger associations.
To demonstrate associational thinking, try to write the word ‘happiness’ in the middle of a sheet of paper and draw lines radiating out from the word. Then write down your thoughts on what the concept of ‘happiness’ means to you. You can it a step further and ask other people to do the same exercise and then compare results. This exercise can be particularly useful to generate ideas for conceptual pictures.
6. Challenge Yourself
Give yourself a new challenge each week. Work on a new problem each week, explore something new with the purpose of solving it or generating ideas. Give yourself regular photo assignments. Challenge yourself to photograph something new.
You may even take on a project. I have done projects like “52 weeks, 52 photos” and August Snaps with the sole purpose of challenging myself creatively.
7. Limit Yourself
One exercise you can do today is limiting yourself to photograph in one area for a certain period of time.
Go to a location that presents a reasonable amount of photo opportunities. This could be the local playground in your area, your local park or nature reserve or perhaps even the local car park. Bring a watch and then time yourself to photograph for one hour.
Keep photographing for a full hour. Continue shooting even if you think you have exhausted all possibilities after 30 minutes. Don’t worry about ‘mistakes’ or ‘failures’ (there really is no such thing) but push yourself to go further, try new angles, low view points, high view points, tight views, wide views etc.
You’ll be surprised just how many creative and interesting images you’ll return after this exercise. Investing time in a location is one of the easiest ways for you to become more creative, to look deeper and see old elements in new ways!

Take a walk through the creative forest. Image by Thomas Folke Andersen
8. Learn a New Photoshop Technique Every Week
While Adobe Photoshop is only a tool to help refine your own personal vision, it’s still a creative tool that can help expand your creative horizon. The more you know about Photoshop, the more creative possibilities are available to you in post-processing and achieving your own personal vision. Additionally a speedy post-processing work-flow also equals less time in front of the computer and more time in the field.
An excellent ressource for Photoshop training (and lots of other software program training) is Lynda.com.
9. Study the Geniuses
You can benefit by learning from the lives, ideas and actions of the great geniuses of history. Adopt a role model – maybe Leonardo da Vinci, Picasso, Einstein, T. S. Eliot, Thomas Edison and find out more about them and their lives.
Photographically the geniuses of history could be (but are certainly not limited to) photographers like Ansel Adams, Alfred Stieglitz, Paul Strand, Eliot Porter, Henri Cartier-Bresson, Josef Sudek, André Kertész, Edward Weston, Yousuf Karsh etc. etc. It can be whoever you personally admire in the history of photography.
Here are some ‘genius’ books to consider:
- Creating Minds by Howard Gardner
- The Genius in All of Us by David Schenk
- The Talent Code by Daniel Coyle
- Idea Mapping by James Nast
- Outliers by Malcolm Gladwell
10. Create Your Own Inspiration Files
If you’re anything like me you enjoy reading photography magazines as a source of inspiration. And if you’re like me, you’re also likely to have a lot of them lying around and have hard time getting yourself to throw perfectly good magazines out.
However the reality is that it’s usually only some of the articles that interest you in each magazine and 30-40-50 percent of magazines are ads anyway. Instead of throwing good magazines out, go through them, tear out the pages and articles that interest you and organize them into files. I simply use affordable, spiral-back portfolios with 40 plastic sleeves per folder which are available from my local stationers. It reduces the clutter, gives me a number of files packed with photography and articles that interest me.

I have written a whole separate blog entry on creating inspiration files which you may wish to read as well.
So there you have it, 10 ideas to kickstart (and maintain) your creativity. However these are of course only 10 ideas out of many available.
If you have any other ideas to kickstart your creativity that you would like to share, then please feel to share and discuss these in the comments fields below.













5. May 2010 at 3:57 pm
nice post. i expected to have to go through inspiration tips that are over written over and over again. but no this is a brand new helpful set of advice
5. May 2010 at 6:33 pm
Hi Diana,
Thanks for you comments and nice words! I appreciate it.
Cheers,
Thomas
13. May 2010 at 3:52 am
Great article. I have to certainly agree about keeping a journal. I now use my iphone to jot down notes and it also helps me to remember ideas better.
btw, i looked up the pen that you use and its got great reviews, but 90 dollars for a pen??
anyways, thanks for the good read.
13. May 2010 at 8:01 am
Hi Myung, thanks for your kind comments.
I don’t own the iPhone but it seems like this phone is a very cool tool. It’s definitely great in that you can both take photos of things you’d like to remember or things that inspire you or give you an idea and then you can also jot down notes. Are you capable of handwriting notes on the screen and make small doodles?
As for the Cross Pen I didn’t even realise it was that expensive! I bought mine many years ago and cannot remember what I paid it, but I doubt it was that much. Anyway, it still serves me well and it’s definitely a good quality pen – unique design, small and compact. The Moleskine notebooks aren’t exactly the most economical notebooks around either, but good quality notebooks.
Once again thanks for your comment.
Cheers,
Thomas
P.S. WOW, your character animations are amazing!
14. May 2010 at 7:42 am
Thanks! I’m glad you enjoyed them.
The iphone does have some good apps that allows me to doodle, but I would rather use my sketchbook to doodle in my ideas.
How do you make your abstract nature photos? I love how they’re so simple and I love the fact that they give off a dreamlike sensation when I look at them. Awesome stuff!!