Why your Vietnam photos will probably look like everyone else’s (and how to fix it)

Why your Vietnam photos will probably look like everyone else’s (and how to fix it)

Everyone goes to Hoi An, buys a paper lantern for 20,000 VND, and takes the exact same photo of a girl in a conical hat looking wistfully at the river. It’s boring. It’s also kind of a lie. Vietnam is one of the most visually over-saturated places on the planet right now, and if you aren’t careful, you’ll spend three weeks and $3,000 just to come home with a hard drive full of National Geographic rejects that feel like they were taken by a robot.

The Hoi An trap and why I’m over it

I used to think Hoi An was the peak of travel photography vietnam. I was completely wrong. The first time I went, back in 2016, I spent four hours waiting for the “perfect” light on the Japanese Bridge. I got the shot. You know what? It looks exactly like the postcard I bought ten minutes later. What I mean is—actually, let me put it differently. We’ve become so obsessed with the aesthetic of Vietnam that we’ve stopped actually looking at it.

Hoi An is basically a theme park now. If you want a real photo, go to the fish market at 4:30 AM. Don’t bring a tripod. If you bring a tripod to a Vietnamese wet market, you are an idiot. You’re in the way of people actually trying to make a living. I saw a guy get shoved into a bucket of eels because he was trying to set up a long exposure of a lady chopping ginger. He deserved it. Total amateur move.

Carrying 4.2kg of gear was a massive mistake

A retro instant camera surrounded by colorful Polaroid photos on a wooden table.

I’m a gear nerd, but Vietnam cured me of that. On my second trip, I tracked my kit weight: exactly 4.2kg including the bag. I had a Sony A7III, a 24-70mm f/2.8, a 70-200mm, and a fast prime. By day three in the humidity of Hue, I wanted to throw the whole bag into the Perfume River. The humidity in central Vietnam is like being hugged by a wet wool blanket that’s been left in a car trunk. It ruins electronics and it ruins your mood.

I’ve since switched to a single Fujifilm X100V. I know people will disagree, and the “pros” will say you need the reach of a zoom, but they’re wrong. I tracked my metadata from my last 3,400 shots in Da Nang and 91% of the keepers were at a 35mm equivalent focal length. Why carry the extra 3.5kg? It’s just vanity. You look like a tourist, you move like a tourist, and people react to you like a tourist. When you have a small camera, you’re just a guy with a hobby. People let their guard down. That’s where the real stuff happens.

I’ve bought the same Fuji 23mm f/2 lens three times now. I sell it, think I need something “better,” then realize nothing else captures the grit of a Hanoi alleyway quite as well. I’m staying loyal this time.

The ethics of the “Old Lady” photo

This is the part where I might get some heat, but I think the way we do street photography in Vietnam is borderline exploitative. We all want that shot of the elderly woman with the deep wrinkles and the betel-nut-stained teeth. But have you ever stopped to think how weird it is? You’re sticking a $2,000 lens in the face of someone making three dollars a day so you can get some likes on Instagram. It feels gross. I refuse to take those shots anymore unless I’ve actually sat down and bought whatever they’re selling first.

Anyway, I was in Sapa in 2019 trying to be “ethical” and ended up in a three-hour conversation with a Hmong grandmother who spoke zero English. We just sat on a low plastic stool and ate sunflower seeds. I didn’t take a single photo of her. I have a photo of the pile of seeds we left behind though. It’s my favorite picture from that trip. It means something to me, even if it’s objectively a bad photo.

Ha Giang is the only place that matters now

If you actually care about travel photography vietnam, get out of the cities. Go north. Rent a bike. The Ha Giang loop is the most visually stunning place I have ever seen, and I’ve been to 40 countries. But here is the reality: you will probably drop your camera. I did.

I was coming around a bend near Meo Vac, tried to one-hand my camera while riding (don’t do this), and hit a patch of loose gravel. I went down. The bike was fine, my knee was a mess, but my lens hood was crushed. I spent the next four days shooting through a cracked filter that created this weird, hazy flare in the corner of every frame. At first, I was devastated. I felt like I’d ruined the trip. But looking back, those photos look more like how Ha Giang feels—raw, dusty, and a little bit broken.

  • Don’t bring a drone to the border areas. The military will take it. I watched a guy lose a DJI Mavic 3 near the Chinese border because he thought he was being sneaky.
  • Shoot in the rain. Hanoi in the rain is 100x more interesting than Hanoi in the sun. The reflections on the motorbikes are incredible.
  • Avoid the midday sun. It’s not just about the light being “harsh”—it’s that everyone is napping. The streets are dead from 12 PM to 2 PM. Go get a coffee.

I tested five different types of “weather-sealed” bags over three rainy seasons in the north. Most of them are marketing fluff. Honestly, a 10-cent plastic trash bag from a VinMart works better than a $200 technical dry bag. Just wrap the body and keep moving. The grit is the point.

The part nobody talks about

Photography is a lonely way to travel. You’re always looking through a viewfinder instead of just being there. I sometimes wonder if I’d remember Vietnam better if I’d left the camera in the hotel safe. Probably not, because I have a terrible memory, but there’s a balance.

Stop trying to find the “undiscovered” spot. It doesn’t exist. Everything has been geotagged. Just find a corner in the Old Quarter, sit on a tiny blue chair, drink a Bia Hoi, and wait for the light to hit the yellow paint of the colonial buildings. That’s it. That’s the whole trick.

I still don’t know if I’m a good photographer or just a guy who likes expensive toys. Does it even matter? If the photo brings back the smell of exhaust and fish sauce, I guess it did its job.

Just please, for the love of god, stop taking photos of the lanterns.

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