As customers and individuals, humans of our generations are trained to watch the screen for what comes next. A surprising, amusing, or thought provoking image can snap bored or inattentive viewers to attention and make them wonder what they missed. But getting that great image can be difficult form frame capture. Video that moves very fast can interleaf key images together.
Often a photo will comprise a patten of objects that are simply grouped or unified by other means. Perspective is key, the motivation and opportunism to slant the lens and tilt the camera and find a new angle on everyday environments. When a series of repeated objects are fresh to the eye, a positioning of the camera can obscure the immediate sensory obfuscations and clarify the lines of the series.
Speed radar machine installations kill me. These orange grilled monsters that bleep with their little protective grid of orange safety cones make my teeth grate against each other. Got up at dawn on a clear day to wrest the image of the park from the Earth? The City got there before you. Have fun standing on a car or curling up on the ground to get the right vantage angle.
Now, to market. The market for things like this can be large because often people are simply looking in image searches for what something looks like. Rarely will anybody look through a 5,000 Wikipedia article when they can scan a few images and make up their minds for themselves. The tags that accompany the image will bring the traffic. Unfamiliar words or proper styles or definitive design or art detail gets curiosity traffic.