Your vacation photographs should not be just a hodgepodge of random snapshots from throughout your trip, but rather a chronological progression of your vacation, or perhaps a storyline of sorts. Arrange your photographs in the framework of beginning, middle, and end. It makes them so much more interesting.
As you take your photographs, it's best to keep a journal of what the subject is and where and when it was taken. Doing so will help when organizing your photographs later. You can use the date/time stamp on your camera for the beginning and end of each roll, if your camera has that possibility.
Although a chronological order is usually the best for a photographic travel journal, sometimes surprise and discovery add extra excitement to your photograph collection. Common view of famous landmarks can be interspersed with close up shots. Portraits can be mixed with groups. And ordinary scenes can be mixed with aerial photographs. Perhaps you can have a theme, or a section of your journal that is theme-specific, such as museums, animals, or portraits.
Although most people put photographs in their travel journals, feel free to add in other trip mementos such as labeled restaurant napkins, postcards, and even photographs from others! They might have a view that you didn't consider. Perhaps they might have a specific scene, location, or object which you were unable to get or were unaware of.
Of course, the first step to any successful travel journal is to book you vacation at www.kingarthur.myttn.com !
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