Feeld Outdoor Photos Photo Checklist
Use this Feeld Outdoor Photos photo checklist to make sure you nail every shot. Prioritized tasks from preparation to final upload.
This checklist helps Feeld users plan, shoot, and upload outdoor photos that match Feeld’s open-minded, privacy-conscious audience while showing authentic outdoor activities and personality. Follow these concrete steps to create an outdoor Feeld profile that’s clear, consensual, and visually compelling.
Write 1–2 short objectives (e.g., “show active, curious traveler” or “highlight kink-friendly, discreet social side”) so every shot supports that message.
Scan 10 Feeld profiles or community threads to note what outdoor shots get replies and which styles are common or avoided, then list 3 elements to emulate or avoid.
Choose one urban, one nature, and one low-foot-traffic private spot within a 30-minute radius so you can show range while staying discreet.
Block 60–90 minutes around sunrise or sunset for softer light; add a backup late-afternoon slot in case of clouds.
Pack 2-3 small props (bike, picnic blanket, book) and a script to ask for consent when including other people so candid shots remain ethical.
Select spots with a clear subject area and uncluttered backgrounds (trees, walls, water) so you stand out at small Feeld thumbnail sizes.
Use a sun-angle app and a weather check 24 hours and 1 hour before the shoot to avoid backlit silhouettes or rain interruptions.
Aim for soft directional light at sunrise/sunset or position in open shade to avoid harsh shadows and squinting in profile thumbnails.
Steer clear of heavy foot-traffic areas for primary photos to prevent accidental faces and group confusion in small Feeld images.
Identify at least one discreet area (park corner, secluded trail) if you plan photos that hint at non-monogamous or kink interest without exposing others.
Pick one outfit that clearly signals your vibe (e.g., outdoor-boho, sleek urban, alternative/kink-leaning but discreet) so viewers get an immediate sense of you.
Pack a casual, a dressier, and an activity-specific outfit to get variety in a single shoot and test what performs best on Feeld.
Choose clothing without prominent brand logos and do not use a group photo as your primary image to prevent confusion about who you are on Feeld.
Bring one outfit that contrasts with your main location (e.g., warm tones against green foliage) so you pop in thumbnails.
Bring a comb, blotting paper, a small hair spray, and sunscreen so small details stay camera-ready during the outdoor shoot.
Capture at least one close headshot (shoulders-up), one full-body, and one candid/activity image to show personality and proportion on your Feeld profile.
Set aperture between f/2.8 and f/4 on a 35–85mm equivalent lens to blur backgrounds and make your face legible in thumbnails.
Bring a small tripod and a Bluetooth remote or 2–10s self-timer to get stable, well-composed solo photos without awkward arm extension.
If including another person, confirm consent and capture a natural interaction (laughing, walking) that shows social context without revealing others’ identities.
Take the same pose at different focal lengths to compare compression and background blur; mark the versions you prefer for editing.
For each pose, take one tighter crop and one looser crop so you have options that work as Feeld thumbnails and full-size images.
Pick a primary headshot plus a mix of full-body and activity shots so your Feeld gallery shows face clarity, context, and range.
Ensure the main subject fills at least 40% of the frame in your primary photo and test how the crop appears at small sizes before uploading.
Fix exposure, adjust white balance, and remove small distractions (lint, minor blemishes) but avoid heavy manipulation that obscures identity.
Skip extreme color shifts or heavy glam filters that can mislead matches about your real look in person.
Save images as sRGB JPEGs with the longest side ~1080 pixels and quality ~80–90 to preserve detail while keeping upload sizes reasonable for Feeld.