The Flourishing Travel Creator

Want to Get Paid to Listen to Our Webinars?

Photo by Alphacolor 13 on Unsplash

Before our free live weekly webinars are added to our on-demand webinar library, where you get:

  • downloadable and streamable versions of the webinar video
  • downloadable and streamable versions of the webinar audio file alone
  • complete access to the webinar slides
  • any applicable worksheets
  • a 10+-page full transcript of the text of the entire call

…we need to have the webinars transcribed!

We’re currently looking to fill a backlog that has built up and have openings for two things:

  • people available immediately to get through our current backlog of webinars awaiting transcription (so it matters what’s on your plate for the next two weeks)
  • people to take on weekly transcription assignments going forward

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Join Us From Home for Our Landmark Live Workshop on the State of Magazine Pitching


Photo by Annie Spratt on Unsplash

Due to some requests from our readers outside the New York area, we’re making this Saturday’s workshop on how to Master Magazine Pitching available to attend even if you aren’t able to join us in person.

We’ve tested the streaming in the event space and the speed is excellent, but we’ll have someone onsite specifically attending to those tuning in remotely to make sure that you can share in all the exercises and get your questions answered as if you were there in person.

Why is this workshop special?

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Don’t Let a Fear of Pulling Together Long Articles Hold You Back One More Day


There are some very extreme views on writing feature-length stories out there.

Some of you:

  • have been in this business a long time and feel like feature stories are the only thing worth your time in terms of both money and interest
  • have not been in the business-side of travel writing at all, but want to jump in only writing features, because you’re only interested in long-form writing and storytelling, not short, informational pieces
  • are absolutely petrified of even pitching a long story, because you don’t know how you’ll fill up the word count
  • feel very firmly that you will never write features because narrative writing is just not your thing

Features are a very polarizing issue, and there’s no single reason why.

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Announcing an Exciting New Feature: FREE Daily Webinars as Dream of Travel Writing Turns 1!


Here at Dream of Travel Writing, we do so much that it’s easy to forget that we’ve only been doing it for a year!

Last November, we:

This November, we’re taking a moment to celebrate not just what we’ve done, but the amazing writers (and especially formerly non-travel writers who now are travel writers!) we have had the pleasure to work with this year.

It like an early Thanksgiving!

In honor of our first anniversary, we’re launching an exciting new feature: You can now stream all of our past webinars–one each day–for free.

These webinars are only available at the times listed, live, but you can catch the replay in video, audio, and transcript form, along with the webinar slides, at any time in our on-demand webinar library.

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Is Your Style Holding Your Travel Article Pitches Back? Part 2!


I don’t like to think of myself as a grammar geek. 

Before I left the 9-to-5 world to freelance, I had several jobs that required editing publications, from letter-length to book-length with lots of magazines and printed newsletters in between, but that type of work stopped sparking for me after a few years.

A lot of editors (the ones you really want to work in particular) get a really high from perfecting a piece of writing–taking what the write meant to say and making it indelibly clear for the reader.

When discussions of grammar and style arise among writers, it is very rarely with that same verve, that sparkle with which editors discuss it. And, more often than not, it’s because writers misunderstand its purpose.

A+ grammar and crystal clear style is not intended to drown out your voice or make your writing sound just like everything else out there.

Quite the opposite.

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Is Your Style Holding Your Travel Article Pitches Back?

Photo by Roman Kraft on Unsplash

I often find it quite comical that my job is (and was for several years even before I was a freelancer) to be a paid writer in English.

While I am a native English speaker, my degree is in Italian language and literature, and I had originally planned to become an Italian professor, so even when I started writing professionally in my pre-freelance full-time job, I didn’t immerse myself in the tenants of journalism, its writing style, or its specific stylistic rules.

Many of you tell me that you are in similar situations with your own transition to freelance travel writing. Your prior experience is in an area so divergent (science or technical writing, law, engineering and the like come up often) from mainstream journalism that you feel as if you’re coming from another language, even if it is English.

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Plating, Staging and Food Photography: Bringing Still Lifes to Life


Photo by Nicolas Ladino Silva on Unsplash

As travel writers, there are so many occasions in our day-to-day doing of our work when we need to take quick, uncomposed shots.

Sometimes you take a quick picture just to remind yourself of something later.

Other times you’re trying to get a personality shot of a guide or other person talking to your group—snapping shot after shot on sports mode like an event photographer and hoping some of them will have usable poses, hands that aren’t in motion, and eyelids that aren’t unattractively half closed (though zombies are very popular these days on television, not so much in blogs and magazines!)

And yet other times, you’re seeking that stealth shot of a local in a location you’re visiting—trying to capture that ephemeral sense of place with your lens on the sly so that you don’t insert the notion of observation into the atmosphere, which inherently changes what your subjects do.

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A Simple Technique to Never Go Home Without the Shots You Need Again


It’s happened to all of us.

You go somewhere a.maze.ing.

You take *tons* of photos.

The light is even fantastic, even though the weather forecast was crap.

All in all you can’t believe your luck (because we all know how easy it is to plan a big day of shooting only to have it foiled by weather, equipment issues, construction, or an entirely unrelated personal emergency), and you are sure you have a memory card full of excellent shots to sell, use on social, and support an epic photo essay on your blog.

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