Dali
Member
maybe its just me but part of me is facinated by street photography
and part of me thinks it is extremely creepy ..
Why creepy?
maybe its just me but part of me is facinated by street photography
and part of me thinks it is extremely creepy ..
Ditto, but I go one step further. I don't see the"art" in 99% of street photography. Just don't see what's interesting about it. But that's just me so if you like street, shoot away.maybe its just me but part of me is facinated by street photography
and part of me thinks it is extremely creepy ..
This. It's not candid if you go around asking for permission. Whether it's right or wrong, polite or rude, is certainly debatable, but we're talking about two different things.
I see the art in old vintage SP. so maybe I'll see the art in current SP if I live long enough!
But maybe I'd find more to be of interest if the genre was named "casual documentary photography ".
Re: Creepiness of Street Photography
One might also want to be aware that this has been making the rounds on social media this month.
Note the 'non-consensual photography' line at the bottom.
https://i.imgur.com/yZ29gvh.jpg
I'm pretty sure this Non-Consensual photography refer to taking a picture of one person while she/he is naked without her/his approval and posting it on the net. I doubt it's about Street Photography.
I'm not so sure as 'revenge porn' is listed in the section above, Anyway, just something to be aware of.
IDKI'm pretty sure this Non-Consensual photography refer to taking a picture of one person while she/he is naked without her/his approval and posting it on the net. I doubt it's about Street Photography.
IDK
there are people who are really creepy out there ...
Ever notice on television shows, especially crime related shows [CSI, NCIS, ...], that the creepy guy is often a photographer?
Ever notice on television shows, especially crime related shows [CSI, NCIS, ...], that the creepy guy is often a photographer?
Ever notice on television shows, especially crime related shows [CSI, NCIS, ...], that the creepy guy is often a photographer?
+1
And very often wear glasses. We are all toasted :-/ Might as well sell our cameras and start a stamp collection.
I think many of us are probably safe.
The creepy people on television rarely have beards and grey, slightly unruly hair.
Very good suggestions. I shoot with a Yashica MAT-124G a good bit and I never go out without someone commenting on it. Of course I can be taking shots of people all day and nobody realizes it.You might try this.
Select a very quiet camera with a wide angle lens. One with a leaf shutter works great. Attach a neck strap to the camera. Set the hyperfocal distance on the lens. Note the minimum distance. Hang the camera around your neck. Attach an air bulb shutter release. Run the air hose behind the camera and under and through your clothing into a jacket or sweater pocket. Set the shutter. Stick your hands into your pockets. Casually walk around in public maintaining at least the noted minimum distance from any potential subjects. When you find something interesting, mentally compose the frame by turning your entire body. Then look away just before you squeeze the bulb. Casually exit the scene and rewind.
I've done this with both a Canonet QL17 G-III and a Yashica MAT-124G TLR. Both have leaf shutters. Never had a single confrontation as not a single subject was ever aware they had been photographed. Even up close.
A side benefit of the TLR is that almost every photo has the subject looking directly into the lens. Not because they suspected. Rather because they had never before seen a TLR and were staring at it. Nice.
Ken
Brian, if you see art in the remaining 1%, it is not that bad! Like you I too often found "street photography" as a label for uninspired snapshots taken in public places but I don't throw out the baby with the bath water. To me, SP is the essence of photography.
Holy smokes, it's really discouraging reading some of the comments showing impressions people have about street/candid/real life photography. I've often thought people project their own issues and interior conversations upon photography, and nowhere as much as the street genre.
I'm certainly not 'creepy' - in fact, my experiences and lessons gained from years (over a decade) going for walks with my camera help me be a more connected and community-minded citizen.
There's art in daily life. That's beyond debate. Mary Ellen Mark herself said, if you can shoot street well you can do any other kind of photography. She's right.
I will agree there's a LOT of utter crap being pawned off as street photography, now. Following the same arc as the avalanche of photos hitting us when digital and the Web happened, unsurprisingly...but there's always been lots of chaff among the wheat kernels. No change, there.
It's pretty simple, from the little I've seen -- shy, awkward milquetoasts who are unsure of themselves will take photos accordingly. People who are sure of what they're doing, and believe in it, and who respect others will bring that to their photographs, too. I mean, good lord...if YOU don't believe in what you're doing, why should anyone else?
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