Regina Leader-Post

How to pick the right photo for your online profile

Useful do’s and don’ts will help you rock your dating site photo

- JONATHAN ELDERFIELD

Like male peacocks showing off their magnificen­t plumage to attract a mate, some men on dating sites post topless mirror-gym selfies.

Not such a good idea, according to dating experts. Women, they say, tend to swipe left when they see gym selfies.

Likewise, dating sites are full of women’s selfies taken from an elevated vantage point, highlighti­ng their cleavage.

“Some women think, ‘If I show a sexy picture, he’s going to think I’m sexy.’

“If you show a sexy picture, he’s going to want to hook up,” says online dating expert Julie Spira, founder of CyberDatin­gExpert. com.

Her advice instead: “Anything that you wouldn’t want your children, your parents or your boss to see, doesn’t belong on a dating profile.”

So what makes a good photo for dating sites and apps?

The profile photo is the important first impression, and “it should be friendly and approachab­le” as well as attractive, says Alex Williamson el-Effendi, head of brand for the Austin, Texas-based dating app Bumble, where women make the first move by initiating the chat after a match.

Ideally, the profile photo also should say something about your life.

“Good photos show what you’re passionate about and show your potential date what life could be like if they were dating you,” says Spira.

That doesn’t mean including other people in the picture.

“One of the biggest mistakes you can make is your first photo being you and a friend, or you and a group of friends,” says el-Effendi.

Shruti Shah, 30, who works in public relations, blogs about food in New York and is on dating apps Hinge and Bumble, concurs.

“It’s a red flag for me if every single photo is a group photo.

“It kind of makes me think that he’s not comfortabl­e with who he is in being able to stand alone and put himself out there,” Shah says.

Jamie Madnick, 27, a preschool teacher in Philadelph­ia who met her boyfriend of over a year on OKCupid, says she didn’t like seeing “a guy in a picture with a girl or all girls.

“It’s intimidati­ng.”

For her own photos, Madnick says she always included “a full body, because I don’t want it to be deceiving,” and she included travel pictures “because that’s a big part of my life.

“I want to show them if you are going to be with me, expect adventure and expect travel.”

Keeping the photos focused on you is important in “creating that attraction,” says another online dating expert, Laurie Davis Edwards of eFlirtExpe­rt.com, based in Los Angeles.

Don’t waste time with images of sunsets or anything else in the brief period of time you have.

“If there’s one photo that’s kind of questionab­le to them as far as attraction is concerned, they’re on to the next person,” she says.

Good photos that show you and your life are conversati­on starters.

“You’re giving people prompts and tools they can work with to ask you questions,” says Shah.

And remember to smile. “I definitely like seeing a guy who’s smiling in most of his photos. It just kind of makes me think he is a little bit more approachab­le and down to earth,” says Shah.

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 ?? SETH WENIG/ THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Online dater Shruti Shah says she prefers men who smile in their profile photos.
SETH WENIG/ THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Online dater Shruti Shah says she prefers men who smile in their profile photos.

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