The Recency Effect, So Don’t Delete

Foothills Parkway, Smokies. (ZEISS Otus 85mm f/1.4 on Nikon D810.)

Foothills Parkway, Smokies. (ZEISS Otus 85mm f/1.4 on Nikon D810.)

I made this image in October 2015, but never thought of it again until December 1, 2017. Why did I let it languish? Obviously, the scene struck me enough to make the photograph. But I can’t explain why it took two years to do something with it.

Often, when I come back from a trip, I’m initially disappointed with the collection of images I made. Sure, I’ll have a couple I’ll send to friends to show where I’ve been shooting, but they’re not anything great. Later (and sometimes much later), I reluctantly look through them again, and am pleasantly surprised to find a couple, or even a few, images I really like. That’s always a fun discovery.

How about you? How many times have you gone back through your older, forgotten images and wondered why you hadn’t done anything with a specific image? Or, more poignantly, not only do you not remember making that image, but don’t even remember seeing an image like it before? Yet you made it!

Or how about the opposite effect? Several of my photo friends come back from a week shooting, and struggle for a few days to get down to their top 100 favorites from that trip. Ask them again in a couple months, and they’ll tell you they didn’t get anything at all from that very same trip!

What in the world is going on? That phenomenon is often called the recency effect. It can affect photographers in different ways—initially for good or bad. For some, their most recent images are all masterpieces, and they have a hard time choosing just a couple to show. But then, they lose interest in most of them. Others, like me, after an initial period of disappointment, find images they come to really like out of what seemed like a batch of rejects.

This leads to an important point. DON’T EVER delete images that don’t resonate with you the first time you see them. You made them for a reason. Let them simmer, and revisit them on occasion. You might be pleasantly surprised what’s already in your files.

4 thoughts on “The Recency Effect, So Don’t Delete

  1. Miguel Calatayud

    Hi
    Thanks for showing your pictures.
    Now you got lot experience with both lenses.
    What would you personaly recomend.
    (The money is not important)

    Some prefer the new Art serie of Sigma.
    What you think

    Greetings from Germany
    MC

    Reply
    1. Tom Post author

      Thanks, Miguel. If your question was about the ZEISS Milvus 25mm f/1.4 or the ZEISS Otus 28mm f/1.4, I bought the Milvus 25mm. It’s a wonderful lens, and I highly recommend it. Neither lens is small, and they are both magnificent. I just found the 25mm focal length more useful. And it was less than half price!

      Reply
  2. Steve Zigler

    I can really relate to the recency effect. Can’t say I’ve ever heard of it, but it know it well. It often happens that it takes years for me to like images from a trip. Is there a cure??

    Reply

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