
Street Photography Magazine Podcast Doug Bruns on Dry Spells, Discipline, and the Long Game
Mar 27, 2026
Doug Bruns, a traveling photographer and former gallery owner, reflects on a life shaped by cameras and long journeys. He discusses returning to film, committing to black-and-white, stepping away from social media, and navigating creative dry spells. Short, reflective stories—like finding a remote sculpture in Maine—underscore the personal motivations behind making images.
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How A College Trip Cemented A Lifelong Practice
- Doug's first major photographic hook came on a junior-year trip to Greece and Israel when his father gave him two Minolta SLRs loaded with Tri-X and Kodachrome.
- That trip merged his study of religion and philosophy with travel, setting a lifelong pattern of traveling with one camera and one lens.
Make Digital Work Like Film To Force Intention
- Emulate the discipline of film when shooting digital by limiting functions and disabling image review to force deliberation.
- Doug reduced choices (prime lens, film-like workflow) to remove distraction and encourage intentional shots.
Choosing Monochrome As A Creative Constraint
- Committing to monochrome can be liberating because it removes a persistent compositional decision (color vs. B&W).
- Doug switched to a monochrome sensor camera to eliminate the temptation to convert back to color during editing.



