How I Publish Photography Daily (Own Your Website, Not Instagram)
What’s poppin’, people? It’s Dante.
Today I want to share my personal way of publishing photography on my own website. I don’t use Squarespace—I use my own WordPress.org blog where I create a stream of images. A stream of consciousness approach to sharing.
I just want to show you behind the scenes of what it looks like and how I publish daily.
The Stream
I don’t believe you should use Instagram.
I believe you should own your own domain.
The way that I share is within a stream. As you scroll, you see images I’ve published for the day. You’ll also see the most recent YouTube video, blog posts, and then more photos.
Each day:
- I title the post with the date and place
- I publish consistently
- I keep the flow going
This workflow has given me discipline:
- Go out and photograph daily
- Stay on top of my archive
- Share every single day
The Publishing Process
It’s simple.
I open Safari. I’ve got tabs ready:
- Posts
- Media library
- Pages
Everything I need is right there.
Let’s say I was at Hollywood Beach yesterday.
I create a post:
Hollywood Beach, 2026
Then:
- Upload photos
- Insert gallery
- Hit publish
That’s it.
The blog becomes:
a canvas, a diary, a notebook
You can share anything instantly.
Not dependent on gatekeepers.
Not dependent on platforms.
Micro Posts → Full Essays
Sometimes I just write something simple:
people are more happy at the beach
Publish it.
Later?
- Click edit
- Expand it into an essay
- Add images, videos
It evolves over time.
The Archive (13,000+ Photos)
On my site, I built a timeline archive.
Over 13,000 photographs from 2022 to 2025.
You can:
- Click any day
- View all images
- See metadata (f-stop, exposure, etc.)
- Download JPEGs
There’s even a verification feature:
- Each image has a computational hash
- Confirms it hasn’t been altered
It’s nerdy. But I did it anyway.
Camera Filters + Simplicity
You can filter by camera:
- Ricoh GR IIIx (40mm)
- GR III (28mm)
There’s:
- Dark mode
- Expandable timeline
- Full chronological flow
I haven’t missed a day in 3.5 years.
Why This Works
This approach is liberating.
Photography is:
an endless stream of becoming
By publishing daily:
- I stay consistent
- I stay organized
- I remove pressure
No:
- Likes
- Comments
- Algorithms
Just pure expression.
Sequencing Into Books
Everything is chronological.
So I can go back and:
- Discover patterns
- Build visual diaries
- Sequence books
Each book:
- ~100 pages
- 50–60 images
I give myself room to:
- Experiment
- Include imperfect images
That’s where creativity happens.
The Discipline Loop
Every day:
- Go out and shoot
- Come home
- Publish
Repeat.
Consistency compounds.
The archive builds.
And because:
- No post-processing
- Small JPEGs
The process is effortless.
Books + Integration
On my site:
- All books are cataloged
- Flip-through previews
- PDFs available
- Purchase links
Everything is integrated.
The System
I built a full system called:
Living With the Ricoh GR
Inside:
- Workflow from shooting → editing → book
- 30-day structure
- Discord community
- Daily sharing
Members get:
- Books at production cost (~$8)
- Full website setup tutorial
You can literally:
plug and play your own platform
Final Thoughts
Owning your platform changes everything.
No noise.
No pressure.
No algorithm.
Just:
- You
- Your camera
- Your archive
I encourage you:
- Delete Instagram
- Build your own space
- Publish daily
Join the Flux community.
Let’s build something real.
Peace.