
01
Find Your Direction
02
Build Strong Work
03
Create Opportunities
A private photography program for photographers who want to position themselves professionally, develop meaningful projects, and build a long-term practice.
Many photographers improve their images but eventually feel stuck: unsure how to develop their work, define their direction, or move beyond a hobby.
This program brings these parts together through production, feedback, direction, and long-term development.
You clarify what you want to photograph, why it matters, and what direction your work should take.
Technical skills, composition, light, and storytelling are developed through real practice — not isolated theory.
The goal is to build stronger images and a consistent visual language.
You learn how to select your best images, build a coherent portfolio, and communicate your work with clarity.
This includes how your work is seen by others — whether clients, galleries, or collaborators.
You learn how the photography and art ecosystem functions — and how to move within it.
This includes how opportunities are created, how to approach them, and how photography can develop into professional and income pathways.
• 4 sessions
• guided feedback
• overview of all pillars
• focused development
• assignments + feedback
• 6–8 sessions
• all four pillars
• continuous feedback
• long-term development
If you’re unsure which direction suits you best, you can start with a Direction Session.
Together, we look at where you are now, what feels unclear, and what kind of work or direction you want to build.
After the session, you’ll clearly understand your direction and the next step.
If you already have a clear idea of what you want to improve, you can choose the option that fits you best after reviewing the options above.
You can explore the Compact Program, focus deeply on a Single Pillar, or move through the full journey with the Complete Program.
Hossein Fardinfard is a documentary photographer and educator based between Amsterdam and Dubai.
Alongside his photographic practice, he has worked closely with photographers through conversations, feedback sessions, workshops, and one-to-one guidance, helping them move beyond technical learning and better understand their own direction, concerns, and way of seeing.
His approach is built around production, feedback, and personal development: not only improving images, but helping photographers understand what drives their work and how to build a meaningful path over time.