5 Essential Italy Photography Tips

 

I've been leading photography workshops in Italy since 2009.

Here are 5 things that I've learned while guiding beginner, intermediate and advanced photographers in some of Italy's most beautiful places.

1: Community Is Key

Keeping my groups to just 7 students means that everyone gets to know each other well, which means that sharing vision, insights, tips and more comes easily. That sense of community is built equally well in the field as we photograph together or over a glass of wine after the light fades.

This environment is a fertile ground for restoring creativity and creating a new foundation for our creative lives.

(photo: a workshop group in Venice)

3: Immersion Creates Intensity

My workshops aim to immerse participants in both photography and Italy, allowing them to get a sense of both culture and place and, in turn, a sense of how to photograph them. That immersion in craft and culture creates an inherent intensity of experience.

Your camera is in hand every waking moment and, because we base all of the workshops in towns and cities (with frequent trips to the countryside), Italian culture is literally at our doorstep.

We live photography while we are living in Italy.

(photo: a papier-mâché artist in Lecce, Puglia)

2: Slow Is Good

The pace of Italian life tends to be slow - or at least slower than what most of the rest of the world puts themselves through every day. Slowing down means that we get to see more. Many travelers try to do so much in each day that they don't get a sense of where they are or what it really feels like.

The itineraries that I set for the workshops leave time for wandering, contemplating, exploring and thinking about what our photographs mean and how they communicate that meaning. Slowing down is one of the keys to making great photographs.

(photo: a workshopper frames up a photograph with his "Curtometer")

4: Storytelling Creates Focus

By getting students to think about story when they make their photographs, and using a variety of instructional strategies to get them there, the photographs they make are better, clearer and more personal statements than if they just shoot whatever they see. Together, we use our cameras to create stories that have a beginning, a middle and an end - and that makes all the difference in the quality of images that students make.

(photo: great stories can be told with a sequence of images - or just one)

5: The Classroom Is Everywhere

Though I have taught photography for more than 35 years, most of my experiences were in a classroom with desks and chairs.

In Italy, my classroom is everywhere - in a hill town, in a vineyard, at breakfast or anywhere we happen to be. My workshop students get to have the experience of making photographs, looking at those photographs and then making more photographs- ones that are informed by the experience of looking, critiquing and guiding.

(photo: Jeff working with a workshopper on composing an image)

There is still space in the 2026 Tuscany Workshop

May 31 to June 7, 2026
Based "Under The Tuscan Sun" in Cortona, Tuscany

Click Here For More Information

2025 Italian Lakes Workshop Student Slideshows – Group 2

A very lively group of workshop students spent a week in the sunny Italian lakes of Como and Maggiore. Our first few days were on Lake Como, photographing in and around the beautiful towns of Menaggio, Bellagio and Varenna. We then made a brief foray into Ticino, an Italian-speaking region in southern Switzerland with charming granite villages and towering waterfalls, after which we finished the week on Lake Maggiore, with a day spent on the famed Borromean Islands and the fantastical Isola Bella, which had been a part of the Grand Tour.

Take a look at the participants’ slideshows below—each link opens in a new tab.

Slideshow Links

Jayn | Rob | Gerry | Steve | Kathy

The 2025 Italian Lakes Photography Workshop Group #2

Photos of this great group in action

2025 Italian Lakes Workshop Student Slideshows – Group 1

A day or so of off-and-on drizzle gave way to a great week of sunny (if hazy) light for this lovely group of workshoppers. Starting in the lovely town of Menaggio on Lake Como, we used the efficient lake ferry system to make our way across the lake to the towns of Bellagio and Varenna, with their beautiful gardens and steep, angled streets.

After a few days and nights on Lake Como, we moved west to Lake Maggiore, stopping first in Ticino, an Italian-speaking part of Switzerland with towering waterfalls and tiny villages constructed from the plentiful granite of the region. Once on Lake Maggiore, we visited the famed Borromean Islands, once part of the Grand Tour. We ate well, we drank great regional wines and we had a whole lot of fun, all while making photographs that told the story of this beautiful Italian area.

Take a look at the participants’ slideshows below—each link opens in a new tab.

Slideshow Links

Eric | Don 1 | Don 2 | Michelle | Jane | Ruth | Nancy

The 2025 Italian Lakes Photography Workshop – Group 1

Photos of this great group in action

2025 Tuscany Workshop Student Slideshows

The ancient hill town of Cortona was cool and rainy earlier in May, but when this group rolled in at the end of the month, they brought the sun with them. We were treated to a string of warm days and crisp, clear nights—the kind of weather that makes late spring in Tuscany feel like a gift.

It was a phenomenal week filled with photography, food, wine, and the kind of camaraderie that only seems to happen when you’re traveling with other curious, creative people. We photographed our way through Arezzo, Anghiari, Montepulciano, Pienza, San Quirico d’Orcia, and beyond—but Cortona remained our home base. We climbed its steep hills daily and gratefully wandered its one flat street, affectionately called Ruga Piana—the “flat wrinkle.”

The group produced some beautiful photographic work and one participant also brought along a sketchbook and watercolors, blending media and ideas—sometimes letting photographs act as a starting point for painted impressions. All week long, we shared thoughtful conversations about image-making, about how our own lives inform what and how we photograph, and how storytelling weaves itself into every frame.

Take a look at the participants’ slideshows below—each link opens in a new tab.

Slideshow Links

Eric | Clark | Al | Lynn | Don #1 | Don #2

The 2025 Tuscany Photography Workshop Group

Photos of this great group in action

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