Why Your Photos Feel Empty (And It’s Not Your Settings)

You keep hearing about getting “better composition” or “dialing in settings,” but this video is focused on something that comes earlier than both: the decisions that decide what the photo is actually saying. If you shoot people and your results sometimes feel technically fine but emotionally thin, this is the kind of checklist that can expose why.

Coming to you from Martin Castein, this practical video lays out three decisions to make before you take the photo, and it avoids the usual talk about rules and gear. Castein starts by rejecting the idea that a photo fails because you picked the wrong aperture or ISO. He argues it fails when you never chose a clear intention, so the image has no backbone. He shows a portrait built around confrontation, and you can see how that single choice shapes everything else in the frame. The expression is not “nice,” the setting is not “safe,” and the discomfort feels designed rather than accidental. If you have ever tried to rescue a weak frame by tweaking settings, this approach forces the fix to happen earlier.

The second decision is blunt and useful: give everything a role. Castein looks at the background, clothing, color, hair, and light as one system, not separate parts you evaluate later. Nothing should be screaming for attention unless it deserves to, and nothing should be sitting there doing nothing. The key pressure here is that “neutral” is not a free pass. A neutral element can still drag the image down by diluting the message. Once you start thinking this way, you stop accepting clutter as “just part of the location,” and you start cutting anything that steals energy from what the picture is about.

The third decision is where the video gets sneaky, because it sounds obvious until you test it: where you place the viewer. Castein reframes camera position as a relationship choice. In one example, the angle keeps the viewer outside the scene, more like an observer than a participant, and the subject not looking at the camera supports that distance. He also points out how eye contact changes the entire photo, even if nothing else changes, and that is easy to underestimate. Try it the next time you shoot: same spot, same expression, one frame with eye contact and one without, then compare what the image feels like.

What matters is how these decisions connect. Intention sets the emotional target. Roles keep every element from fighting that target. Viewer placement decides whether the moment invites someone in or holds them back. That chain also gives you a clean reason to skip shots. If the three parts do not line up, you do not “fix it in camera” or “fix it later,” you just do not take the frame, and that restraint is a skill on its own. Check out the video above for the full rundown from Castein.

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