- posted on
- December 10, 2007
- by Liz Danzico
Nothing to Write Home About
I’m not a photographer, but somehow I find myself carrying at least two cameras at any given time: an iPhone camera and either a point & shoot or, more recently, a digital SLR. The latter two are intentional tools—I carry them with the intention of recording something (or hoping something photoworthy will happen). But the iPhone camera is unintentional—its presence is purely circumstantial.
But more and more, I find myself reaching for the iPhone instead of a proper camera. It’s not that the iPhone camera is smaller, more impressive, or even more fun to use. Upon a quick examination of my photos, it seems that it’s not about the camera at all—the contents of my photos themselves are changing.
An unscientific look at just under 12 weeks of my photos revealed the following:
Breakdown of photo contents
Number of photos of people: 46
Number of photos of animals: 93
Number of photos of environments: 112
Number of photos of documents, labels, and signs: 36
I’m taking more photos than ever before, and a large majority are of text. Not people, scenes, animals, or architecture, but standard, inanimate, black-and-white text. And 94% of my text-based photos are taken with the iPhone.
Percentage taken with cameraphone
Number of photos of people: 46 (0% taken with cameraphone)
Number of photos of animals: 93 (17% taken with cameraphone)
Number of photos of environments: 112 (32% taken with cameraphone)
Number of photos of documents, labels, signs: 36 (94% taken with cameraphone)
What seems to be happening is that the iPhone is not taking the place of my other cameras, but instead taking the place of writing. I’m choosing to photograph things where I once wrote them down.

A gazillion years ago, the average person only needed to make a decision about whether or not to document something. With the advent of consumer-level photography and then digital photography, the choice became between writing and photographs. But the ubiquity of cameraphones has further splintered the once-simple choice.

Each camera has become a different type of documentation tool. The digital SLR is used for art: it’s the camera I use intentionally. The photos themselves, therefore, tend to be of people and places—framed shots. The point & shoot is much the same—but for situations where quality is not important. The cameraphone, though, has become a documentation tool (albeit a recognized camera in its own right). It’s only purpose is to photograph signs, labels, URLs, and other text-based items to record for further investigation.
Perhaps the user experience of the iPhone has made this difference more perceptible. Or perhaps I’m just too busy multi-tasking to write things down. But I suspect something else is happening. At a time where penmanship classes are disappearing, and people see their handwriting is deteriorating, the cameraphone has stepped in to fill the void. And it’s clear, when it comes to documentation over art, the quality of the photo just doesn’t matter.
Fascinating! I have found a similar thing. I am taking more photos of text too: wine labels of bottles I wish to remember, business cards that I cant be bothered transposing right then, and the like.
I think another decision point is whether you need to share this info.
So interesting, Liz!
I have an iPhone and I have been experiencing the same thing. I keep reaching for the iPhone to take pictures in lieu of either of my (better) cameras. In fact, I now have half as many photos on my iPhone (nearly 1000 taken in 6 months) as I have uploaded from my Canon and Leica to my flickr account in two years! Strange indeed. Or maybe I am just lazy.
Stephen Rose at Fast Company has a list of things to take phone camera pictures of - just left a comment linking to this post. Seems like he has similar uses (if less related to his line of work) for quick snapshots.
At the Hirschhorn two years ago, I photographed title cards after snapping photos of works I wanted to remember. Last summer, on my first trip to Manhattan, I went to MOMA with just a notebook. I prefer the entirely subjective descriptions that resulted. They evoke images more vibrant than my photos from DC, and I’m fine that they’re half invention. Writing starves my Flickr account, but since dismissing my compulsive inner documentarian I’m really really enjoying things.
@Justin: It’s true. I haven’t commented at all the quality of the photographs in any of the collections, or the relative rise or fall in quantity versus quality. Like your trip to MoMA with the subjective descriptions, I wonder if one or more of my cameras betrays the subjectivity more than others.
Plato’s Socrates put forth that “writing destroys memory” — relying on it might become forgetful, he urged, as people offload memory onto the new technology. I think he’d agree with you, to an extent, that photography is destroying writing.