Archibald Burns promoted himself as a landscape photographer and sold individual prints, stereographs, cabinet cards, and
magic lantern slides of views of Edinburgh and surrounding area. Burns illustrated two books on Edinburgh published in 1868, three years before he took his series of photographs of closes and wynds for the Edinburgh Improvement Trust (January and February 1871). The text in
Picturesque "Bits" from Old Edinburgh (1st ed. 1868) emphasizes the architectural history of Scotland and the importance of photography in preserving the knowledge of fading vernacular styles and ends with a questions regarding the future of Scottish architecture. The book is illustrated with 15 tipped-in albumen prints by Burns and 8 woodcuts by Charles Paton after drawings in Daniel Wilson's
Memorials of Edinburgh in the Olden Time (2 vols., 1st ed., 1847), some of which date from the 1830s. The Edinburgh Improvement Trust appointed Burns to record the recently cleared and derelict buildings between the Cowgate and Chambers Street in 1871. He produced twenty six prints that are now an important historic record of this area. Unlike the haunting work by Glasgow photographer
Thomas Annan for that city's Improvement Trust, Burns's photographs of Edinburgh's closes and wynds record the area as ruined and half-destroyed buildings without any residents present. Despite both working out of Rock House in 1870–71, it is not certain whether or not Burns saw Annan's photographs of Old Glasgow. == List of publications ==