The Ultimate 15-Minute Personal Brand Audit Checklist

FREE DOWNLOAD

Discover What’s Holding You Back from Being Seen as an Authority

Entrepreneur in a bold, vibrant outfit standing confidently on location during a personal brand shoot

9/08/25

What to Wear for a Personal Brand Shoot That Actually Feels Like You

Dress for the Frequency, Not the Feed

What you wear during a personal brand shoot isn’t about trends — it’s about translation. It’s how your energetic signature gets encoded visually.

You’re not wearing an outfit. You’re wearing an identity — your future self.

I don’t believe in following strict rules. But I do believe in wearing what brings out your most elevated, confident, expressive version — not a costume or cliché.

So here’s what I recommend after 20 years behind the lens:

Hire a Stylist — If You Can

This is always my first suggestion. A skilled stylist doesn’t dress you in someone else’s vibe — they refine who you already are.

They’ll:

  • Pull elevated versions of what already works for you
  • Source brands you might never consider
  • Bring in texture, shape, and layering to build story visually

Even if you think you have great style, stylists see with a different lens.

If You’re Styling Yourself, Here’s What Matters

1. Avoid Wearing All Black

It’s not a dealbreaker, but black tends to flatten your presence. It absorbs light and pushes you into the background. If you love black, layer it with textures or pops of color.

2. Wear Colors That Pop — But Not Just Your Brand Colors

Everyone thinks they need to match their color palette. But wearing all your brand colors can look forced or cheesy. Instead:

  • Choose colors that highlight your skin tone and energy
  • Bold hues are magnetic on camera
  • One look that hints at brand colors? Great. But don’t overdo it

3. Neutrals Are Everywhere — Don’t Blend In

Beige is beautiful… if it’s you. But 90% of personal brand shoots are drowning in beige, taupe, and oatmeal. Stand out. Let your energy be seen.

Color is a code. It tells the world you’re not afraid to take up space.

Entrepreneur wearing a bold magenta blazer in front of a city background
Eliza Ali Elevated Realism Emanate Photoshoot

4. Patterns Are Great — If They’re Good

I love bold, high-design patterns. But avoid:

  • Super fine plaids (they create a weird camera effect called moiré)
  • Loud, distracting prints that overwhelm your face

5. Fit Is Everything

Baggy clothes do not work on camera unless styled intentionally. They’ll photograph bigger than they are. Always opt for:

  • Fitted shirts and jackets
  • Tailored pants or flowy pieces that move but still contour

6. Elevate with Accessories

Accessories are energetic signatures:

  • Statement jewelry
  • Meaningful rings or necklaces
  • Glasses, hats, scarves — they add layers to who you are visually

You’re not just dressing. You’re art-directing your identity.

Close-up of hands wearing statement rings and bracelets on set during a personal brand shoot

7. Buy for the Shoot — Then Return If You Want

Some clients go all out and build a new wardrobe. Others buy aspirational pieces and return them after. Either way:

  • Don’t be afraid to explore outside your usual look
  • This is your visual evolution — go 10% past your comfort zone

Real-World Transformation: Nicky Clinch’s Style Evolution

When Nicky Clinch first stepped into the frame, she wasn’t a stranger to transformation — she teaches it. But stepping in front of the camera without a stylist or visual team? That was uncharted territory.

We were shooting her first Elevated Realism™ session. She came with her own wardrobe, a bit unsure, wanting to look professional but not sterile. As we reviewed her looks, I could see the core of who she was — powerful, healing, grounded — but the styling wasn’t reflecting that frequency.

So I stepped in. I refined her looks, reshaped the story. We pulled pieces that had texture, flow, and sacred feminine energy. Think: soft movement, earth tones, and silhouettes that framed her as both mentor and mystic.

We shot in nature. Raw cliffs. Soft light. Wind as a collaborator.

Nicky Clinch during her first brand shoot, styled by Nick Onken in earth-toned, flowing fabrics
Nicky Clinch Elevated Realism Emanate Personal Brand Photoshoot

And the result?

“These images finally feel like me,” she said. “This is the first time I’ve seen my essence visually captured.”

That shoot became her signature presence online. It shifted her audience. It set the tone for her brand evolution.

Sequel Session: With Celebrity Stylist Ivanna Fontana

Fast forward. Nicky booked her next shoot — but this time, we brought in celebrity stylist Ivanna Fontana.

The difference was exponential. With my creative direction and Ivanna’s layering of refined pieces, we went from aligned to iconic.

Where her first shoot felt like discovering her voice — this one felt like claiming it.

Outfits were sourced to mirror the deep inner authority she had stepped into. We styled for impact — bold textures, elevated fabrics, empowered silhouettes.

Nicky Clinch styled by Ivanna Fontana in a bold, high-fashion look during her second personal brand shoot
Nicky Clinch Elevated Realism Emanate Personal Brand Photoshoot

She didn’t just look beautiful. She looked undeniable.

The contrast told a powerful story:

  • Same soul, evolved expression
  • Same woman, elevated container

“This was the embodiment of who I’m becoming,” Nicky reflected.


Internal Links


FAQs

Can I wear something from my brand palette?

Sure — but don’t overdo it. One look is great. Let your wardrobe reflect you, not a design system.

What about shoes?

Always bring clean, versatile pairs. And yes — we’ll shoot some barefoot, too.

Do you help select outfits before the shoot?

Yes. If you don’t hire a stylist, I’ll guide you through looks and creative direction.

LET'S CONSPIRE & CREATE

CULTIVATING YOUR VISUAL UNIQUENESS AND STREAMLINING YOUR BRAND'S EVOLUTION

Dress for the Frequency, Not the Feed

What you wear during a personal brand shoot isn’t about trends — it’s about translation. It’s how your energetic signature gets encoded visually.

You’re not wearing an outfit. You’re wearing an identity — your future self.

I don’t believe in following strict rules. But I do believe in wearing what brings out your most elevated, confident, expressive version — not a costume or cliché.

So here’s what I recommend after 20 years behind the lens:

Hire a Stylist — If You Can

This is always my first suggestion. A skilled stylist doesn’t dress you in someone else’s vibe — they refine who you already are.

They’ll:

  • Pull elevated versions of what already works for you
  • Source brands you might never consider
  • Bring in texture, shape, and layering to build story visually

Even if you think you have great style, stylists see with a different lens.

If You’re Styling Yourself, Here’s What Matters

1. Avoid Wearing All Black

It’s not a dealbreaker, but black tends to flatten your presence. It absorbs light and pushes you into the background. If you love black, layer it with textures or pops of color.

2. Wear Colors That Pop — But Not Just Your Brand Colors

Everyone thinks they need to match their color palette. But wearing all your brand colors can look forced or cheesy. Instead:

  • Choose colors that highlight your skin tone and energy
  • Bold hues are magnetic on camera
  • One look that hints at brand colors? Great. But don’t overdo it

3. Neutrals Are Everywhere — Don’t Blend In

Beige is beautiful… if it’s you. But 90% of personal brand shoots are drowning in beige, taupe, and oatmeal. Stand out. Let your energy be seen.

Color is a code. It tells the world you’re not afraid to take up space.

Entrepreneur wearing a bold magenta blazer in front of a city background
Eliza Ali Elevated Realism Emanate Photoshoot

4. Patterns Are Great — If They’re Good

I love bold, high-design patterns. But avoid:

  • Super fine plaids (they create a weird camera effect called moiré)
  • Loud, distracting prints that overwhelm your face

5. Fit Is Everything

Baggy clothes do not work on camera unless styled intentionally. They’ll photograph bigger than they are. Always opt for:

  • Fitted shirts and jackets
  • Tailored pants or flowy pieces that move but still contour

6. Elevate with Accessories

Accessories are energetic signatures:

  • Statement jewelry
  • Meaningful rings or necklaces
  • Glasses, hats, scarves — they add layers to who you are visually

You’re not just dressing. You’re art-directing your identity.

Close-up of hands wearing statement rings and bracelets on set during a personal brand shoot

7. Buy for the Shoot — Then Return If You Want

Some clients go all out and build a new wardrobe. Others buy aspirational pieces and return them after. Either way:

  • Don’t be afraid to explore outside your usual look
  • This is your visual evolution — go 10% past your comfort zone

Real-World Transformation: Nicky Clinch’s Style Evolution

When Nicky Clinch first stepped into the frame, she wasn’t a stranger to transformation — she teaches it. But stepping in front of the camera without a stylist or visual team? That was uncharted territory.

We were shooting her first Elevated Realism™ session. She came with her own wardrobe, a bit unsure, wanting to look professional but not sterile. As we reviewed her looks, I could see the core of who she was — powerful, healing, grounded — but the styling wasn’t reflecting that frequency.

So I stepped in. I refined her looks, reshaped the story. We pulled pieces that had texture, flow, and sacred feminine energy. Think: soft movement, earth tones, and silhouettes that framed her as both mentor and mystic.

We shot in nature. Raw cliffs. Soft light. Wind as a collaborator.

Nicky Clinch during her first brand shoot, styled by Nick Onken in earth-toned, flowing fabrics
Nicky Clinch Elevated Realism Emanate Personal Brand Photoshoot

And the result?

“These images finally feel like me,” she said. “This is the first time I’ve seen my essence visually captured.”

That shoot became her signature presence online. It shifted her audience. It set the tone for her brand evolution.

Sequel Session: With Celebrity Stylist Ivanna Fontana

Fast forward. Nicky booked her next shoot — but this time, we brought in celebrity stylist Ivanna Fontana.

The difference was exponential. With my creative direction and Ivanna’s layering of refined pieces, we went from aligned to iconic.

Where her first shoot felt like discovering her voice — this one felt like claiming it.

Outfits were sourced to mirror the deep inner authority she had stepped into. We styled for impact — bold textures, elevated fabrics, empowered silhouettes.

Nicky Clinch styled by Ivanna Fontana in a bold, high-fashion look during her second personal brand shoot
Nicky Clinch Elevated Realism Emanate Personal Brand Photoshoot

She didn’t just look beautiful. She looked undeniable.

The contrast told a powerful story:

  • Same soul, evolved expression
  • Same woman, elevated container

“This was the embodiment of who I’m becoming,” Nicky reflected.


Internal Links


FAQs

Can I wear something from my brand palette?

Sure — but don’t overdo it. One look is great. Let your wardrobe reflect you, not a design system.

What about shoes?

Always bring clean, versatile pairs. And yes — we’ll shoot some barefoot, too.

Do you help select outfits before the shoot?

Yes. If you don’t hire a stylist, I’ll guide you through looks and creative direction.

Entrepreneur in a bold, vibrant outfit standing confidently on location during a personal brand shoot

9/08/25

What to Wear for a Personal Brand Shoot That Actually Feels Like You

Blog

infuse your vision with a fresh breath of  creativity and vitality

BOOK A BRAND PHOTOSHOOT

GET THE DETAILS

GET THE DETAILS

infuse your vision with a fresh breath of  creativity and vitality

PODCAST

BRAND INTELLIGENCE

CREATIVE INTELLIGENCE

LIFE INTELLIGENCE

Dress for the Frequency, Not the Feed

What you wear during a personal brand shoot isn’t about trends — it’s about translation. It’s how your energetic signature gets encoded visually.

You’re not wearing an outfit. You’re wearing an identity — your future self.

I don’t believe in following strict rules. But I do believe in wearing what brings out your most elevated, confident, expressive version — not a costume or cliché.

So here’s what I recommend after 20 years behind the lens:

Hire a Stylist — If You Can

This is always my first suggestion. A skilled stylist doesn’t dress you in someone else’s vibe — they refine who you already are.

They’ll:

  • Pull elevated versions of what already works for you
  • Source brands you might never consider
  • Bring in texture, shape, and layering to build story visually

Even if you think you have great style, stylists see with a different lens.

If You’re Styling Yourself, Here’s What Matters

1. Avoid Wearing All Black

It’s not a dealbreaker, but black tends to flatten your presence. It absorbs light and pushes you into the background. If you love black, layer it with textures or pops of color.

2. Wear Colors That Pop — But Not Just Your Brand Colors

Everyone thinks they need to match their color palette. But wearing all your brand colors can look forced or cheesy. Instead:

  • Choose colors that highlight your skin tone and energy
  • Bold hues are magnetic on camera
  • One look that hints at brand colors? Great. But don’t overdo it

3. Neutrals Are Everywhere — Don’t Blend In

Beige is beautiful… if it’s you. But 90% of personal brand shoots are drowning in beige, taupe, and oatmeal. Stand out. Let your energy be seen.

Color is a code. It tells the world you’re not afraid to take up space.

Entrepreneur wearing a bold magenta blazer in front of a city background
Eliza Ali Elevated Realism Emanate Photoshoot

4. Patterns Are Great — If They’re Good

I love bold, high-design patterns. But avoid:

  • Super fine plaids (they create a weird camera effect called moiré)
  • Loud, distracting prints that overwhelm your face

5. Fit Is Everything

Baggy clothes do not work on camera unless styled intentionally. They’ll photograph bigger than they are. Always opt for:

  • Fitted shirts and jackets
  • Tailored pants or flowy pieces that move but still contour

6. Elevate with Accessories

Accessories are energetic signatures:

  • Statement jewelry
  • Meaningful rings or necklaces
  • Glasses, hats, scarves — they add layers to who you are visually

You’re not just dressing. You’re art-directing your identity.

Close-up of hands wearing statement rings and bracelets on set during a personal brand shoot

7. Buy for the Shoot — Then Return If You Want

Some clients go all out and build a new wardrobe. Others buy aspirational pieces and return them after. Either way:

  • Don’t be afraid to explore outside your usual look
  • This is your visual evolution — go 10% past your comfort zone

Real-World Transformation: Nicky Clinch’s Style Evolution

When Nicky Clinch first stepped into the frame, she wasn’t a stranger to transformation — she teaches it. But stepping in front of the camera without a stylist or visual team? That was uncharted territory.

We were shooting her first Elevated Realism™ session. She came with her own wardrobe, a bit unsure, wanting to look professional but not sterile. As we reviewed her looks, I could see the core of who she was — powerful, healing, grounded — but the styling wasn’t reflecting that frequency.

So I stepped in. I refined her looks, reshaped the story. We pulled pieces that had texture, flow, and sacred feminine energy. Think: soft movement, earth tones, and silhouettes that framed her as both mentor and mystic.

We shot in nature. Raw cliffs. Soft light. Wind as a collaborator.

Nicky Clinch during her first brand shoot, styled by Nick Onken in earth-toned, flowing fabrics
Nicky Clinch Elevated Realism Emanate Personal Brand Photoshoot

And the result?

“These images finally feel like me,” she said. “This is the first time I’ve seen my essence visually captured.”

That shoot became her signature presence online. It shifted her audience. It set the tone for her brand evolution.

Sequel Session: With Celebrity Stylist Ivanna Fontana

Fast forward. Nicky booked her next shoot — but this time, we brought in celebrity stylist Ivanna Fontana.

The difference was exponential. With my creative direction and Ivanna’s layering of refined pieces, we went from aligned to iconic.

Where her first shoot felt like discovering her voice — this one felt like claiming it.

Outfits were sourced to mirror the deep inner authority she had stepped into. We styled for impact — bold textures, elevated fabrics, empowered silhouettes.

Nicky Clinch styled by Ivanna Fontana in a bold, high-fashion look during her second personal brand shoot
Nicky Clinch Elevated Realism Emanate Personal Brand Photoshoot

She didn’t just look beautiful. She looked undeniable.

The contrast told a powerful story:

  • Same soul, evolved expression
  • Same woman, elevated container

“This was the embodiment of who I’m becoming,” Nicky reflected.


Internal Links


FAQs

Can I wear something from my brand palette?

Sure — but don’t overdo it. One look is great. Let your wardrobe reflect you, not a design system.

What about shoes?

Always bring clean, versatile pairs. And yes — we’ll shoot some barefoot, too.

Do you help select outfits before the shoot?

Yes. If you don’t hire a stylist, I’ll guide you through looks and creative direction.

Entrepreneur in a bold, vibrant outfit standing confidently on location during a personal brand shoot

9/08/25

What to Wear for a Personal Brand Shoot That Actually Feels Like You

When you need a trusted creative partner in the room.

Take the Fit Check

Be seen at the level you’re stepping into.

Hey! I'm Nick.

PHOTOGRAPHER
BRAND ALCHEMIST
TEACHER

At vero eos et accusamus et iusto odio dignissimos ducimus qui blanditiis praesentium voluptatum deleniti atque corrupti quos dolores et quas molestias excepturi sint occaecati cupiditate non provident, similique sunt in culpa qui officia deserunt mollitia.

Build authority from the inside out.

Emanate is a creative-direction-led photography experience for entrepreneurs, speakers, and thought leaders in a moment of expansion. This isn’t about better photos. It’s about aligning how you’re seen with who you’ve become. For seasons of rebrand, visibility, and next-level leadership.

Magnetic Authority is a self-guided container for people who feel visible, but not fully anchored.

If your message keeps shifting, your brand feels inconsistent, or your presence doesn’t match your capability yet. This is where you build the foundation before you scale.

Take the Fit Check

Start Here

For founders, creatives, and leaders who want a trusted long-term partner. This isn’t coaching or traditional consulting.

It’s an ongoing creative partnership focused on bringing your personal brand identity to life.

Your brand. Your website. Your visuals.
All shaped as a direct extension of who you are. The work also includes a bespoke process of identifying and aligning the right experts when needed, so nothing gets built out of sync with your core.

Explore the Partnership

Quiet. Precise. Highly Selective.

read the latest

Comparison showing personal brand visibility versus recognition and coherent identity building

You can be visible without being recognizable. Most people confuse the two. They post constantly. Show up everywhere. Maximize exposure. They think: “The more people see me, the more my brand grows.” But visibility isn’t the same as recognition. Visibility is being seen once. Recognition is being remembered. Visibility is impressions. Recognition is identity. You […]

Emma Reicher embodied leadership brand photography transformation mixing streetwear qigong Wales landscapes

Emma Reicher was hidden. No real brand. No photos of herself. Just lofi graphics that looked student-made. She had the credentials. Maturation coach. Qigong practitioner. Psychotherapy background. Real expertise. But nobody could see her. Nobody could feel her. The gap between who she was and how she showed up publicly was complete invisibility. The Fear […]

Visual representation of private, public, and projected self in personal brand identity alignment

You’re not one person. You’re three. Right now, in this moment, you’re simultaneously living as three different versions of yourself. Most people never realize this. They think identity is singular. Fixed. One coherent self moving through the world. It’s not. You have a private self. The person you are when no one is watching. The […]

Comparison showing performed brand photography versus authentic personal brand photos reflecting true identity

You got the photos back. They’re professionally lit. Perfectly composed. Technically flawless. But when you look at them, something feels wrong. That person in the images looks like you. Same face. Same features. But the energy is off. The presence doesn’t match. When you see those photos, you don’t think “that’s me.” You think “that’s […]

Editorial portrait of Elena Ghanzani expressing grounded confidence and brand authority

There’s a moment when someone stops holding back. Not loudly.Not dramatically. Quietly. That’s where Elena was when we began. The Moment Before the Shift Elena already had depth. Her thinking was clear.Her work was resonant.Her leadership was forming. But her visuals were still careful. They hinted at who she was becoming without fully letting her […]

Minimal editorial portrait expressing grounded presence and embodied alignment through soft light and stillness

TL;DR – What You’ll Learn in This Post There’s a feeling you recognize when it happens. Nothing is split.Nothing is rushed.Nothing is held back. Your thoughts, body, and actions move together. This is embodied coherence. What Embodied Coherence Really Is Embodied coherence isn’t intensity.It’s not confidence.It’s not motivation. It’s alignment in motion. What you feel […]

Five essential books for creatives about accessing creativity and creative living fundamentals

Most creativity books teach technique. Methods. Processes. Step-by-step systems. These five books teach something else. They teach how to be creative. How to access creativity. How to stay in creative practice. How to overcome what stops you. Not tactics. Fundamentals. The foundation everything else builds on. I return to these repeatedly. When stuck. When resistant. […]

Editorial portrait expressing calm authority and embodied presence through Elevated Realism photography

There is a moment when your visuals stop keeping up with who you are. It’s subtle at first.Then it becomes obvious. You feel clear internally.But your imagery feels dated.Or noisy.Or just slightly off. That tension isn’t a branding problem.It’s a readiness signal. 1. Your Work Has Evolved, But Your Images Have Not You’ve grown.Your thinking […]

Editorial portrait expressing identity alignment and embodied presence through Elevated Realism photography

TL;DR – What You’ll Learn in This Post Identity does not change in theory. It changes in contact. Growth happens when something internal meets reality.Not in thought.Not in intention. In experience. This is where identity alchemy begins. What Identity Alchemy Really Means Identity alchemy is not reinvention.It is integration. It is the moment your inner […]

Nicky Clinch founder Body-Mind Maturation teaching identity dissolution through transformational brand photography

Nicky Clinch teaches people to dissolve their identity. So when I suggested professional photography and styling, she resisted. “Isn’t this the opposite of what I teach?” Her work is about loosening attachment to identity. Mine is about making identity visible. The paradox was real. But here’s what she discovered: you can have an identity without […]

Professional coach photographed in a calm, editorial environment with natural light and grounded presence

TL;DR – What You’ll Learn in This Post Why Brand Photography Matters More for Coaches As a coach, you are the product. People are not buying information.They are buying clarity, trust, and emotional safety. Your imagery sets the tone before a single word is spoken. If your photos feel stiff, overproduced, or generic, it creates […]

Minimal editorial portrait expressing calm presence and embodied awareness through light and stillness

TL;DR – What You’ll Learn in This Post Imagination does not create reality. Presence does. Ideas live in the mind.Vision lives in the future.But reality responds only to what is here. Nothing moves forward without presence. Not clarity.Not alignment.Not creation. Presence is not something you add.It is what remains when you stop reaching. The Gap […]

Editorial portrait of Peter Crone captured with calm presence and understated authority using Elevated Realism

Some people do not need to perform. They simply arrive. Peter Crone is one of them. His work is quiet.Precise.Deep. So the challenge was never how to make him look impressive.It was how to let his essence lead. This case study is about what happens when imagery stops trying and starts listening. The Challenge Peter’s […]

About the Blogger

I was born in a low middle class conservative religious family in the suburbs of Seattle. Art was and always has been my passion, and more than that a way of life. Starting as a graphic designer, I taught myself photography, built a commercial/editorial business shooting for the worlds biggest brands like Nike, Coca-Cola, Adidas and more. I've also had the opportunity to photograph the world's biggest celebrities like Justin Bieber, Usher, Jessica Alba and more. I've curated a lifestyle around creativity and have learned a lot along the way which I get to share here. 

I was born in a low middle class conservative religious family in the suburbs of Seattle. Art was and always has been my passion, and more than that a way of life. Starting as a graphic designer, I taught myself photography, built a commercial/editorial business shooting for the worlds biggest brands like Nike, Coca-Cola, Adidas and more. I've also had the opportunity to photograph the world's biggest celebrities like Justin Bieber, Usher, Jessica Alba and more. I've curated a lifestyle around creativity and have learned a lot along the way which I get to share here. 

NICK'S STORY