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Home / Photography Challenges / Make the Ordinary Look Extraordinary

Make the ordinary look extraordinary photography challenge

Make the Ordinary Look Extraordinary

March 2, 2016 by Darlene Hildebrandt

You don’t need a new lens or exotic location to make a great photo. This challenge invites you to slow down, observe more closely, and see how creativity can bring simple things to life.

TL/DR: Photograph something plain or overlooked, and use light, angles, and composition to make it visually interesting. This builds creativity and control, especially for beginners practicing at home.

Look again, then look differently

Ordinary subjects are everywhere. But when you learn to control how you frame and light them, they become opportunities. This challenge is about learning to see what others overlook, and making it interesting.

A fish-eye lens add an odd distortion to things.
A fish-eye lens add an odd distortion to things.
An organ in an old church at night with some light painting becomes a spooky subject.
An organ in an old church at night with some light painting becomes a spooky subject.
Motion blur added by moving the camera during the exposure.
Motion blur added by moving the camera during the exposure.

What this challenge teaches you

This is a technical and creative challenge in one. It helps you strengthen essential photography habits while giving you room to experiment. Expect to get more confident with:

  • Lighting control and direction
  • Composition and framing
  • Observing details others miss
  • Using shallow depth of field
  • Creating mood or story with simple setups

How to do the challenge

Here’s a simple way to approach it:

  1. Pick one ordinary object in your space. Anything will do.
  2. Photograph it from at least three different angles.
  3. Change the light each time. Try a lamp, window light, or flashlight.
  4. Create three or more variations using different creative techniques.
  5. Choose the image that surprised you most.
ordinary to extraordinary photography challenge
Try black and white, and a shallow depth of field.
ordinary to extraordinary photography challenge
Get close to capture fine details (notice the spider web?) and try black and white.
ordinary-extraordinary-750px-03
Shoot in black and white, and try some light painting in the dark.

Creative techniques to try

Try one or two of these methods to change how the object looks. You can mix and match, or repeat the exercise with new combinations:

  • Shoot in black and white to simplify the scene
  • Use side light or backlight to enhance texture or shape
  • Get in close with macro to find new details
  • Blur the background with a wide aperture
  • Change your angle. Get low, high, or shoot through something
  • Add motion blur or experiment with intentional camera movement
  • Try light painting in a dark room
  • Use reflections or shadows to make the scene more dynamic
  • Photograph it at night using only a flashlight or candle
  • Use a wide-angle or fisheye lens to exaggerate form

Example photos with teaching notes

Use these for inspiration. Notice how the angle, light, or context changed the image:

  • A doorknob shot with side light becomes sculptural
  • A sponge under macro reveals unexpected textures
  • A coffee cup in morning light looks atmospheric
  • An antique object feels timeless with close focus
  • A plastic ornament turns abstract with bokeh and a wide aperture
  • A church organ becomes moody with flashlight light painting
This is a doorknob in my house.
This is a doorknob in my house.
ordinary-extraordinary-750px-14
Macro and a shallow depth of field makes this make-up sponge seem like it’s from another world.
Photograph your morning coffee and snack.
Photograph your morning coffee and snack. I added extra grain here to give it an old film photography look.
I love antiques and have a few old relics around my house that look great close-up.
I love antiques and have a few old relics around my house that look great close-up.
My cat likes to hide in the window and I captured just her eye behind the leaf using my smartphone.
My cat likes to hide in the window and I captured just her eye behind the leaf using my smartphone.
A camera bag close-up (this one was actually taken at WPPI, I don't own this bag).
A camera bag close-up (this one was actually taken at WPPI, I don’t own this bag).

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Finding ordinary things shouldn’t be all that hard – look around the room you’re in now, what do you see: books, papers, shoes, DVDs, tissue, plants, furniture, etc? The challenge here will be how to photograph these things to make them look more appealing and interesting. Here are a few ideas to help you get started:

  • Try macro photography and get some close-ups of little details. Things sometimes look completely different at that level. Read: The Ultimate Guide – Macro Photography for more tips on that.
  • Do some special effects like maybe light painting, or motion blur.
  • Use different qualities of light: try hard light, then switch to soft light.
  • Shoot from a funky camera angle: down low, up high, through something, put the object on a piece of glass and shoot from underneath it. Angles which we don’t normally see in our daily lives are instantly more interesting than images shot at eye level.
  • Use shallow depth of field and add some bokeh in the background.
  • Shoot it in black and white or convert it using your favorite processing software.
  • Photograph it at night, or in the dark with a spotlight or flashlight.
  • Shoot for texture – make sure the light enhances the texture of the object.
  • Go ultra wide with a fish-eye lens if you have one (or you can borrow or rent one for a day).
  • Make a silhouette by backlighting the object if it has an interesting shape.

Share your results and stay inspired

These kinds of challenges are exactly what we work on inside the DPM Community. Every week, we post a new action or prompt to help keep your camera in hand.

Share your photos, get feedback, and find others working on the same challenge.

About Darlene Hildebrandt

Darlene Hildebrandt, Master of Photographic Arts (MPA), is a Canadian photography educator and the founder of Digital Photo Mentor. She holds Canada's highest professional photography designation from Professional Photographers of Canada, served as Managing Editor of Digital Photography School, and represented Canada on Team Canada at the 2025 World Photographic Cup. With over 35 years of experience, from darkroom film retouching to modern digital editing, more than 17,000 students have learned to edit with confidence through her structured online courses in Luminar Neo and Lightroom Classic and the Digital Photo Mentor Community.

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Learn, share, and feel supported!

Join our friendly photo community for kind feedback, monthly challenges, and live help from Darlene — safe, private, and troll-free.

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