Most of the time I just stumble upon my pictures. I love to go walking in the forest or spend time at the seaside, and when going out I usually bring a camera. Especially in the forest having the camera and looking for pictures makes it more of an adventure to be there. Many areas around where I live have been untouched for a rather long time, making the woods more fascinating to walk in. I see trees and stones forming shapes and starting up my imagination, it's no wonder people used to see trolls and other creatures out there. Especially late evenings before it gets dark something magic happen, both to the light and the surroundings. New shapes appear and you start to hear strange sounds as the wind stops for the night. And being out among the trees just around the time when the night falls, or even after it gets dark, is a special feeling. Scary and soothing at the same time. When it comes to my "vintage" pictures I'm often inspired by looking at old photos, and I try to do that a lot. I believe my daughters are starting to get scared about the amount of old photo books they will have to carry away one day.
There are many amazingly good old photographers. I like, for example, Lewis Carrol and the way he staged the scenes in his photographs to tell small stories. That is something I would like to try more myself. There is also a Swedish female photographer, Lina Jonn, who had a portrait studio in the 1890s. I have one of her original portraits of a man with a giant beard together with a dog. The print is tiny and bleached, but it is a real treasure. Her dedication to run a business and to create great pictures, both documentary ones and good portraits, is fascinating. And just the fact that she was a woman made her sort of an underdog from the beginning, but she made it anyway.
What strikes me most, and really inspires me when looking at old photos, is the enormous control the photographers had over their process to get a technically almost perfect result. How they used the light in beautiful ways, and how they manipulated and worked with both the negative and the final print in the darkroom.
Other times I just get a thought in my head that I have to explore, but most of the time it's the "stumble upon" part that applies. It may be by using old plates or other material that behaves in an unexpected way, or by finding a fascinating place, or something else that surprises me. I do, however, often revisit places to get a better picture of something that didn't turn out like I imagined when I took the first photo. I also often find myself being affected by music and getting ideas after listening to something that really talks to me or put me in a certain mood. Or from reading, or looking at paintings or other types of art. Basically anything that affects me.