It seems that for quite a long period of time, visual culture was based on the principle that progress implied higher resolution, sharper imagery, cleaner surfaces, and more precise digital rendering. Contemporary photography, advertising campaigns, luxury brands, gallery displays, and web content have all been evolving step by step toward polished images.
At this moment, this approach seems to be changing.
In contemporary photography, gallery displays, fashion campaigns, installation documentation, magazine visuals, and other visual environments, softness is slowly coming back. Haze, grain, blur, imperfect focus, reflective surfaces, and imperfect textures are becoming popular once again among contemporary creators.
One might say that this move is gradual and barely visible.
However, one can see how the trend appears consistently across different branches of visual culture.
Partially, this transformation is a consequence of visual fatigue caused by excessively optimized digital images. During the last several years, there has been an overwhelming number of ultra sharp and visually perfect photographs created specifically for digital platforms.
Moreover, during 2025 and 2026, the number of artificially generated images started growing significantly.
That is why more
contemporary artists and designers began choosing a different way of working.
Instead of trying to achieve absolute perfection, creative people started focusing more on atmosphere, tactility, and emotional texture.
The new imagery is not anti digital.
However, it emphasizes the experience of the image instead of presenting it as something perfectly optimized.
This tendency is especially visible in contemporary gallery photography. Some exhibitions are created in such a way that they cannot be captured with full sharpness. Reflections make it difficult to focus the camera correctly. Translucent materials add complexity and uncertainty to the composition. Diffused light and shadows start playing an important role, creating atmosphere inside the picture.
As a result, it becomes harder to obtain clear information from the image. The image itself becomes the medium of experience.
A similar trend has also appeared in fashion related visual culture. Projects increasingly pay attention to movement and spatial atmosphere. In addition, fashion photography focuses more on the interaction of surfaces and compositions, with
similar structural ideas emphasizing the volume of garments instead of only presenting a fashion product.
This phenomenon may also be explained by the changing relationship between visual artists and their audiences in the digital environment. Hyper-polished visuals used to imply authority, luxury, and a high level of technique. On the contrary, the more perfect an image appears today, the more likely the audience may consider it synthesized, commercialized, or produced automatically by an algorithm.
Softness opens more space for the audience to think about what they are seeing and to interpret the visual content.
As a consequence, current tendencies are associated with techniques and technologies that were relevant decades ago. Older lenses, grain textures, imperfect focus, and low contrast visuals have been appearing not only as nostalgia, but also as tools for balancing contemporary polished digital images.
It is important to understand that this transformation is not about rejecting technological progress. On the contrary, artists working in this area use it to a great extent. However, the main focus is on emotion rather than technical perfection.
Contemporary creatives try to preserve some element of unpredictability in the image.
This trend can also be noticed in other spheres of visual culture, including posters, museum branding, fashion show design, independent publishing, and editorial photography. Typography becomes less mechanical. Lighting starts emphasizing atmosphere more than precise illumination. Reflections and materials become more visible.
Moreover, contemporary luxury brands have recently become more tactile in their visuals. Fabric folds, reflective distortions, texture irregularities, layering, and interaction with the surrounding environment started playing an important role in compositions instead of being treated as visual flaws.
These trends also seem connected to changing audience expectations around authenticity. In a digital world full of automated optimization, any deviation from perfection can attract attention as proof of human involvement in the process.
A blurred reflection, grain pattern, hazy edge, or diffused light source may evoke this feeling better than a perfectly sharp image.
One can suggest that these tendencies explain why current visual culture has started losing interest in sharpness as its main characteristic.
While sharpness remains important in architecture, product photography, documentation, and similar areas, contemporary imagery now focuses on more than visual perfection.
Rather, atmosphere and emotion have become equally important in the way images are created and experienced today. Thus,
softness becomes an essential part of the composition.