The text if present should compliment and not take away from the picture.
Like you said, you find yourself more time reading than looking and that has
to be investigated.
- No text. The photograph speaks for itself for good or bad.
- With Text. Text may support the photograph, guide the viewer, enhance the experience,
provide more information, manipulate emotions, take time from viewing the photo, distract,
force the viewer to take a literal, cerebral approach instead of pure instinctual and visual.
Text can either lead the viewer to where the photographer wants to, change his/her perceptions
completely, provide a bit more enjoyment, or totally confuse and take away from the photograph.
A mere single word, a title, a paragraph, or whole page has to be thought of. Every word changes
the relationship of the viewer with the artwork. Care has to be taken as the text not to be become
the artwork and steal all interest and meaning from the photograph as it is often the case.
Your photographs Nicole are instinctual and emotional, speaking of warm human nature.
The text has to be appropriate. In your case, I think a few words, a small story, a poem,
something human, gentle, warm, emotional and touching will enhance the pleasure of the
photographs. It has to be intimate and feeling provoking not cold and austere, like a diary,
thoughts and memories written down, feelings expressed with words that hold hands with
your photograph. No words would be ok, just a title would be too strict, more than a paragraph,
too much.