Types of Photography: Genres, Styles & Techniques Explained

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Published: September 12, 2025 | Last Updated: December 18, 2025

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Photography is the art of capturing light to create images, but not every photo fits the same box. To make sense of the field, this article is divided into four parts: genres, styles, techniques, and lighting.

Genres focus on the subject, styles define the look, and techniques explain the methods. Think of it like this:

  • Genre = subject.
  • Style = look.
  • Technique = method.
  • Lighting = setup & source used.

In practice, they often blend — a portrait might use a black and white style with a shallow depth of field technique and Rembrandt lighting setup. Together, they show you what you’re shooting, how it appears, and the tools you use to get there.

Genres group images by what they show — people, landscapes, buildings, animals, or events. A portrait focuses on a person. A landscape shows a place. A documentary photo tells a real story. Each genre has its own goals, settings, and visual cues. Genres help you choose how to shoot and why. A sports photo needs speed. A food photo needs detail. Knowing the genre sets the direction for how you plan and capture the image.

Adventure Photography: Outdoor Action

Person in red jacket standing inside Breiðamerkurjökull ice cave with blue ice walls
Adventure photos highlight extreme places and the challenge of reaching them. Here’s one from the Breiðamerkurjökull ice cave in Iceland, where the environment itself becomes the subject, showing both the danger and beauty of remote exploration.

Adventure photography show extreme places or sports. Climbing, hiking, surfing, all count. You need to be fast, prepared, and safe. The focus is energy, motion, and environment.

Architectural Photography: Design and Structure

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I love filling the frame when I shoot architecture, because it gives the image an abstract, artistic look. Here’s a cross-section of a building from Hamburg, Germany

Architectural photography captures buildings and interiors. You focus on lines, symmetry, and light. You might shoot a modern skyscraper or an old stone church. The goal is to show design and atmosphere.

Astrophotography: Capturing the Night Sky

Milky Way arcing over Mount Bromo at night, captured with long exposure
The Milky Way forms a bright arc over Mount Bromo in East Java. This long exposure reveals star clusters invisible to the naked eye, with the volcano’s ridges still visible under moonlight.

Astrophotography shows stars, planets, and galaxies. You shoot with long exposures and often need tracking gear. Dark skies, patience, and planning matter most. Common shots include the Milky Way, the moon, or meteor showers.

Brand Photography: Showing Identity Through Images

Flat lay of coffee packaging, to-go cups, paper bag, and sugar sticks on brown background
Brand photography shows a company’s identity. This mockup of coffee packaging and to-go items is styled for consistency, making the brand easy to spot and trust.

Brand photography is a subgenre of commercial photography and includes creating a visual identity for a business. You plan every image to reflect the company’s tone, whether that’s playful, serious, or sleek. It might include product shots, office scenes, or staff portraits. The goal is trust and recognition.

Cityscape Photography: Urban Views

Manarola, Cinque Terre, with agave plant in foreground and pastel cliffside buildings
Here’s a cityscape photo I took of the beautiful village of Manarola in Cinque Terre, Italy, this summer. The town climbs the cliffside in layers of color. I liked the agave plant in the foreground because it adds depth and scale to the composition.

Cityscape photography show skylines, streets, and public spaces. You might shoot at night to get glowing lights or during the day to show daily life. This style focuses on the built environment.

Documentary Photography: Visual Storytelling with Facts

People walking in a refugee camp with portable toilets and piles of trash bags
Documentary photography records harsh realities. This refugee camp scene from the Lesbos Moria camp shows poor conditions without sugar-coating the sad facts.

Documentary photography tells real stories through images. You research your subject, take photos with minimal edits, and build a photo essay. It might be a day in a refugee camp or life on a farm. Truth and trust are key.

Event & Wedding Photography: Moments That Matter

Performer on stage facing large festival crowd under orange stage lights
Here’s one I shot at a small Danish festival. Event photography captures energy and reaction in real time, from the performer’s gesture to the audience’s raised hands.

Event & wedding Photography covers real-time events. You move fast to catch key moments, smiles, tears, first dances. It’s a mix of posed portraits and candid reactions. Weddings are the most common, but they also include concerts and parties.

Fashion & Glamour Photography: Style, Identity, and Elegance

Young woman posing with braids, sunglasses, and playful earrings against a pink background
Fashion photography is bold and styled to highlight clothing, accessories, and attitude. The bright backdrop and playful pose turn this portrait into a visual statement about identity and style.

Fashion & glamour photography highlights clothing, beauty, and attitude. Fashion photography, a subgenre of commercial photography, is bold, styled, and often brand-driven. Glamour photography uses soft light, makeup, and careful poses to show confidence and elegance. A rooftop model shoot or a glowing studio portrait both fit here.

Food Photography: Making Dishes Look Delicious

Stack of pancakes with honey dripping down, styled with flowers and honeycomb in background
A stack of pancakes drips with golden honey in this food photography setup. Shallow depth of field keeps the focus on texture and shine, while soft light makes the scene feel warm and appetizing. Dammit! Now I want pancakes!

The food photography genre focuses on texture, color, and freshness. Soft lighting, shallow depth of field, and careful styling make food look irresistible. It’s used for menus, blogs, and social media. A glowing bowl of pasta or a shiny slice of cake can trigger cravings instantly. Food photography is also a subgenre of commercial photography.

Landscape Photography: Nature, Place, and Atmosphere

Layers of mountain ridges in Sierra Nevada, Andalusia, captured at sunset with warm tones
Here’s a landscape photograph I shot in the Sierra Nevada mountains in Andalusia, Spain, at sunset. I like the mood and simple, clean layers of the mountains.

Landscape photography capture outdoor scenes. You use natural light, wide lenses, and timing to show beauty and mood. It could be a quiet sunrise, a dramatic thunderstorm, or even an urban skyline.

Portrait Photography: Capturing People and Emotion

Portrait of a person in hoodie lit with red and blue light against a dark background
Portrait photography is about faces and expression. In this shot, red and blue light shape mood and personality, showing how lighting changes a portrait.

Portrait photography focuses on faces and expressions. You control lighting, pose, and background to highlight personality. It can be a formal business headshot or a casual photo of a friend laughing in the sun. This style also includes actor headshots and school portraits.

Product Photography: Selling Through Images

Photographer capturing yellow shoe on display with studio lights and backdrop
A studio product shoot focuses on a yellow shoe with controlled lighting and styled setup. Product photography aims for clarity and appeal, balancing detail with presentation to make objects look desirable.

Product photography shows objects clearly and attractively. You control reflections, colors, and shadows to make items pop. It’s used in online stores, ads, and packaging. A clean white shot of a sneaker or a styled skincare flat lay both belong here. Food photography is also a subgenre of commercial photography.

Real Estate Photography: Selling Space

Bright modern kitchen with island, pendant lights, and built-in cabinets
Real estate photography uses clean composition and lighting to make spaces look welcoming. This modern kitchen is shown with balanced lines, warm tones, and clear detail to highlight both style and function.

Real estate photography is all about clean, bright images. You shoot wide to show size, and use lighting to make rooms look open and welcoming. It’s often used for home listings and rentals. It’s also become more and more common to shoot real estate video. So that’s something to be aware of if you want to work as a real estate photographer. Food photography is also a subgenre of commercial photography.

Sports Photography: Freezing Motion

Close-up of swimmer mid-stroke with water splashing in sharp detail
A swimmer cuts through the water during a freestyle stroke. High shutter speed freezes droplets midair, turning fast action into a sharp and dynamic frame.

Sports photos freeze fast action. You use long lenses and high shutter speeds to catch a split second. A basketball dunk, a football tackle, or a sprint finish all show energy and timing. Great shots also capture emotion and drama.

Street Photography: Life as It Happens

Overhead view of two people with colorful umbrellas and a child walking on a dark street
Here’s a street photo I took in La Spezia, Italy, on a rainy day this summer. I liked how the bright umbrellas stand out against the dark pavement.

Street photography catches real moments in public spaces. It’s fast, candid, and spontaneous. You might shoot strangers on a crosswalk, at a protest, or at a couple walking with umbrellas in the rain. The goal is to tell a story with a single frame.

Travel & Cultural Photography: Places, People, and Story

Elderly woman with a paper bag selecting fruit at a market in La Spezia, Italy
Travel and cultural photography mixes street, portrait, and landscape. I took this photo in a La Spezia market, where daily life and detail show how others live.

Travel & cultural photography mixes landscape, street, and portrait photography. It captures life in other places. A monk in a temple or a busy market street both show culture and context. Travel photography is about showing how others live.

Urban Exploration Photography: Forgotten Places

Looking down a decayed spiral stairwell in an abandoned building with broken railings and debris
Urban exploration photography captures forgotten spaces like this crumbling stairwell. The focus is on decay and mystery, showing history etched into abandoned structures while reminding us of the risks of entering off-limits places.

The urban exploration genre focuses on capturing abandoned or off-limits buildings. You might explore old factories, tunnels, or hospitals. The appeal is decay, mystery, and history. Safety and legality are always a concern.

Wildlife & Pet Photography: Capturing Animal Behavior

A red squirrel peeking from behind a tree trunk captured with a telephoto lens
The squirrel stays hidden in the branches, but a telephoto lens makes the moment feel close. I shot this little fella on a Panasonic GH5 with a PanaLeica 100–400mm. Long glass lets you capture wildlife without disturbing it.

Wildlife photography shows animals in their natural environment. It takes patience and long lenses. Pet photography is more personal, meaning it’s often about showing connection or funny domestic situations. Both styles need timing and empathy.

A style is the creative approach or mood. It’s how the photo looks and feels, often shaped by the photographer’s choices.

Abstract Photography: Shape, Color, and Texture

Aerial view of Blue Lake in the African desert showing abstract textures and natural patterns
Abstract photography focuses on shape, color, and texture over clear subjects. From above, natural patterns blend into fluid lines, turning landscape into pure form and tone. Here it’s an aerial photograph from a lake in Sahara.

Abstract photography doesn’t focus on a clear subject. It’s about patterns, textures, and light. A close-up of cracked paint or moving water can become something new and unrecognizable. It’s open to interpretation.

Black and White Photography: Texture and Contrast

Black and white image of a male dancer lit from the side against a dark background
Black and white photography cuts out color to focus on shape and shadow. Here, side light defines the dancer’s form, showing strength and movement through contrast.

Black-and-white photography removes color to highlight light, shadow, and shape. You focus on texture and form. Black and white works well for portraits, street scenes, or dramatic landscapes.

Conceptual Photography: Visualizing Ideas

Woman with closed eyes covered in butterflies, surrounded by butterflies in soft green light
Conceptual photography begins with an idea. In this portrait, butterflies cover the subject to create a staged image about transformation and fragility. The concept drives the photo, and the visuals are built to match it.

Conceptual photography starts with a message or concept. You design the image to match the meaning. A person floating might suggest freedom. Empty rooms could show loneliness. It’s about ideas first, visuals second.

Editorial Photography: Telling Stories Through Images

Black and white fashion magazine cover with model posing and styled text layout
Editorial photography supports articles and layouts. This mockup shows how a staged portrait works on a magazine cover, connecting image and story.

Editorial photography supports articles or magazine layouts. They can be posed or candid, but always connect to a bigger story. A photo of a musician in their studio or a protestor on the street fits here.

Fine Art Photography: Visual Expression and Mood

Black and white image of a dancer posing in silhouette against large industrial window
Fine art photography is about ideas, not just subjects. The dancer’s pose is staged with intention, made to express mood and meaning, the kind of image built for a gallery wall.

Fine art photography focuses on feeling, not facts. You build or edit images to express an idea or emotion. Abstract shapes, surreal scenes, and moody edits are common tools.

Minimal Photography: Less is More

Minimal winter photo of a frozen lake in Sweden during a whiteout, with no visible horizon and soft gray tones throughout.
A frozen lake in Sweden during a whiteout. I took this photo to explore minimal photography, where space, silence, and tone take the lead.

Minimal photography strips the frame to simple shapes, colors, or subjects. Empty space and clean lines matter most. A lone tree in a field or a single object against a blank wall are strong examples.

Candid Photography: Natural and Unposed

Two people carry a mattress on their heads down a narrow street in a small village in the Sierra Nevada mountains, photographed candidly by Jan Sørup.
I took this candid photo in a mountain village in the Sierra Nevada. Two people walk down a narrow street carrying a mattress on their heads. It shows a real moment in everyday life.

Candid photography captures real moments as they happen. People move, talk, or laugh without posing. It’s often used at weddings, events, or in street scenes to keep photos natural and full of life.

Still Life Photography: Objects and Design

Still life composition with purple flowers in a vase, figs in a bowl, and draped cloth
A still life arrangement pairs purple asters with figs and fabric in matching tones. Careful lighting highlights texture and color harmony, echoing classical painting traditions.

Still life photography involves styled objects. The focus is on balance, light, and design. You might shoot fruit in a bowl, vintage tools, or a styled coffee scene. It’s quiet, but every detail counts.

A technique is the method or tool you use to make the photo. It’s the practical way of shooting. Techniques shape how an image looks by controlling light, motion, depth, or sharpness. That can mean using long exposure to blur motion, setting up a tripod for HDR, or adjusting the angle to create reflections. Some techniques use gear, like ND filters or flash triggers. Others rely on camera settings or physical setups.

Double Exposure Photography: Two Images, One Frame

Double exposure portrait of a woman with overlapping facial expressions and flowing hair
Here’s a double exposure portrait by blending two images of the same subject. But it doesn’t have to be on the same subject. You can take a photo of your muse one day and two weeks later take a picture of a forest and mix these two, if you want to.

Double exposure blends two images into one. It creates a dreamy or symbolic effect. A portrait over a forest, or a face layered with city lights, can tell a deeper story. You can do this in-camera or in editing.

Fill the Frame

A photograph showing a section of a cow (half the head and some of the neck) filling the frame.
Here, I chose to fill the frame and only show a small section of the cow. It lets us focus on the fur and wringles instead of the context.

The fill-the-frame technique means you are composing your shot so that the subject fills most or all of the frame. By removing empty background areas, you force attention on details, expressions, or textures. This technique is common in portraits, wildlife, and macro work where every detail matters.

Film Photography: Analog Techniques and Texture

Close-up of film roll on wooden surface with blurred vintage camera in background
Film photography is still used today because of its unique look and process. Grain, color tones, and the slower pace give photographers results that feel different from digital and closer to traditional craft.

Film photography uses rolls or sheets instead of digital sensors. It requires slower, more deliberate shooting. You develop your images by hand or in a lab. Film offers grain, softness, and color that many still prefer.

Focus Stacking

Focus-stacked photo of tulip field at sunrise near the Netherlands Carillon, showing vibrant flowers and soft light across the landscape.
A focus-stacked image of tulips in full bloom captures depth and detail from foreground to horizon. Shot at dawn near the Netherlands Carillon, it combines three stacked shots for the flowers and one for the sky to balance sharpness and exposure.

Focus stacking blends several photos taken at different focus points into one sharp image. This technique expands the depth of field, keeping both foreground and background details clear. It’s common in macro and product photography, where precision matters.

HDR Photography (High Dynamic Range)

HDR photograph of London’s Tower Bridge and skyline at sunset, showing balanced light in both the sky and city buildings.
The London skyline and Tower Bridge at sunset are captured with HDR photography. Multiple exposures balance the bright sky and shadowed buildings, keeping details visible across the scene.

HDR photography combines multiple exposures of the same scene into one image. This balances highlights and shadows so details stay visible across the frame. It’s often used in landscapes or interiors where contrast is too strong for a single shot.

Large Format Photography: Precision and Detail

Bellows-style large format field camera with a Graphex lens mounted on a tripod
Large-format field cameras use a folding design with bellows, allowing for tilt, shift, and swing movements. The ground glass at the back shows an upside-down image for manual focusing. It shoots one sheet of 4×5 film at a time.

Large format photography uses sheet film (usually 4×5 inches or bigger). The cameras are slow but allow full control. You shoot under a dark cloth, focus manually, and expose one sheet at a time. It’s often used in fine art, architecture, and landscape photography.

Long Exposure Photography

Long exposure shot of traffic is also fun
In this long exposure highway shot, headlights and taillights stretch into colored trails across the night. The slow shutter speed of 30 seconds captures the motion of traffic while the rest of the scene remains sharp and still.

Long exposure photography keeps the shutter open for several seconds or more. This makes moving elements blur while still objects stay sharp. Waterfalls turn smooth, traffic lights form trails, and stars trace arcs across the sky.

Macro Photography: Details You Can’t See

Black-and-white macro photo of water droplets on a blade of grass
Water droplets are great for practicing macro. They’re easy to find, don’t move, and show how light behaves on a curved surface. This shot captures shape, reflection, and texture, all things you’ll need to control in close-up work.

Macro photography shows tiny subjects at life-size or bigger. You use close-up lenses or extension tubes to reveal fine details. A spider’s eye or a water droplet becomes the whole scene. Focus and lighting matter most.

Panning

A person rides a white bicycle while the background blurs with streaks of motion, showing the panning photography technique.
A cyclist is captured with motion blur in the background while staying sharp in focus. The panning technique follows the subject to create a sense of speed and direction.

Panning tracks a moving subject with the camera while using a slower shutter speed. This keeps the subject sharp but blurs the background, creating a sense of speed. It works well for cars, bikes, or athletes in motion.

Time-Lapse Photography: Seeing Change Over Time

People on escalators in a metro station.
Here’s a still from a long exposure time-lapse series I took at a metro station in Copenhagen that shows people in transition. My intention was to show business and people in transit, and the long exposure helped convey that while keeping people anonymous at the same time.

Time-lapse captures slow changes and speeds them up. You shoot a series of photos over time, then play them back quickly. Clouds race, flowers bloom, or cities come alive. It’s a creative way to show movement and growth.

Lighting setups control what we see and how we see it. A softbox spreads light evenly to reduce shadows on the face. A spotlight creates a strong contrast for a dramatic effect. Backlighting can separate a subject from the background. Each setup changes how the subject looks — sharper, softer, brighter, or more mysterious. Choosing the right lighting is part of how you shape the final image.

Broad Lighting

Portrait of a woman lit with broad lighting. The near side of her face is bright, while the far side falls into softer shadow.
This portrait uses broad lighting, where the near side of the face is lit and the far side is in shadow. The effect makes the face look wider and more open.

Broad lighting lights the side of the face that faces the camera. This makes the face look wider and softens shadows.

The key light is placed to hit the “broad” side of the subject’s face (the side turned more toward the lens). It’s often used for headshots or portraits where you want a softer, fuller look, especially on narrow or angular faces.

Butterfly Lighting

Portrait of a woman with blue body paint lit with butterfly lighting, showing a soft shadow under the nose shaped like a butterfly against a dark background.
Here, we have a good example of butterfly lighting with the light placed in front and above the subject. It creates a soft shadow under the nose, shaped like a butterfly.

Butterfly lighting uses a high front-facing light source, often paired with a reflector under the chin. It’s classic for beauty shots and old Hollywood portraits. It works best when the subject is facing the camera. Light comes from directly above the camera, casting a butterfly-shaped shadow under the nose. This style flatters cheekbones and smooths skin.

Loop Lighting

Woman in sunglasses eating a lollipop with loop lighting shadow on a turquoise wall
Loop lighting creates a soft nose shadow that curves gently onto the cheek. The light source is placed slightly above and to the left, sculpting the jawline while preserving detail in the face. The hard-edge shadow on the wall shows the light direction clearly.

Loop lighting places the main light slightly above and to the side of the subject. It works well in portraits where you want a clean, natural look with just enough depth. It’s a go-to setup for headshots and lifestyle shoots. A soft shadow falls to one side of the nose, creating a small loop. This simple setup adds shape to the face without heavy contrast.

Natural Light Photography: Using the Sun

Young woman in striped dress with natural light falling on her face, softened by shadow
Natural light photography often uses shadow to shape and soften light on the subject. In this portrait, shade diffuses sunlight, keeping skin tones even while adding depth and contrast to the frame.

Natural light photography uses the sun instead of flash or LEDs. You plan around golden hour, clouds, and windows. It’s soft, real, and common in portrait, street, and travel photography.

Rembrandt Lighting

Portrait of a man using Rembrandt lighting
Rembrandt lighting portrait photography example

Rembrandt lighting uses a single light placed high and off to the side. It’s named after the Dutch painter who often used this lighting shape in his paintings. It’s great for cinematic portraits or moody scenes. A triangle of light appears under one eye, while the rest of the face stays mostly in shadow. It creates a painterly, serious feel.

Short Lighting

Portrait of a woman lit with short lighting. The far side of her face is lit, while the near side remains in deep shadow.
This portrait uses short lighting, where the far side of the face is lit and the near side is in shadow. The result narrows the face and adds dramatic contrast.

Short lighting lights the side of the face turned away from the camera. This adds more shadow and gives the face a sculpted shape.

The key light is placed on the far side of the face, leaving the near side in shadow. Short lighting adds depth and contrast. It works well for dramatic portraits, moody lighting, or to slim the appearance of the face.

Split Lighting

A black-and-white portrait of a woman kneeling, lit with split lighting, showing one side of her face and body in light and the other in shadow.
Split lighting is also great for dramatic full-body portraits and is not just for headshots.

Split lighting puts the key light at a 90-degree angle to the subject. It divides the face in half — one bright, one dark. It’s often used to create intensity in character portraits, music photography, or editorial work. One side of the face is lit, the other falls into shadow. This setup adds strong mood and drama to a portrait.

Summing Up

Photography is the art of capturing light and moment. Each genre offers a different way to shoot, feel, and tell a story. Trying new styles helps you learn, grow, and see the world in new ways.

Read Next: Want to level up your photography skills?


Explore our Photography section for guides on lighting, composition, camera settings, and creative techniques across genres like portrait, landscape, and street.


Whether you’re shooting on a mirrorless camera or your phone, you’ll find sharp, practical tips to take more intentional and creative photos.


Also check out our Visual Composition section, with deep dives into framing, color psychology, and visual art history—key tools for any photographer thinking like an image-maker.

By Jan Sørup

Jan Sørup is an indie filmmaker, videographer, and photographer from Denmark. He owns FilmDaft.com and the Danish company Apertura, which produces video content for big companies in Denmark and Scandinavia. Jan has a background in music, has drawn webcomics, and is a former lecturer at the University of Copenhagen.