Street Photography: A Classic Genre
By Jeff Brown
Some of the most iconic images of the 20th century were examples of what’s known as street photography—images made by photographers roaming city streets, snapping scenes that appealed to their sense of artistic composition and their fascination with human behavior.
Want to try your hand at street photography?
For inspiration, look at some of the images made by Henri Cartier-Bresson, Gary Winogrand, or Joel Meyerowitz. For a more modern take, check out Valerie Jardin’s Instagram feed.
Law and Ethics
Before discussing how to approach street photography, it’s important to say that under U.S. law, if you are lawfully in a public space you have the legal right to photograph anything that’s in plain view, including people—even without their consent.
Please note that the laws in other countries are different. For instance, in South Korea, photographing people in public without their consent is a crime. If you want todo street photography abroad, make sure to check the laws of the country you plan on shooting in.
Just because you have legal right to photograph something or someone doesn’t mean you should, however.
Street photography often presents ethical issues. For instance, whether you should photograph children in public and if you do whether you should post the images on social media. I usually avoid including children in my street photography, even if they’re with a parent and the parent gives permission, because it’s not a good idea to post photos of other people’s children on social media, and social media is the main outlet for my photos.
Speaking of consent. Most times, if you avoid eye contact before you press the shutter button and then give a quick smile before moving on, people won’t notice or care if you’ve photographed them.
If someone does spot you and complains—and you’re shooting digital—be polite, apologize, and offer to delete the photo. If the person asks you to delete the photo, do so (if you’re using a camera with two memory cards you can set the camera up so that a copy will be saved to one of the cards; it’s up to you whether you use that copy). For what it’s worth, in two years of weekly street shooting someone has complained and asked that I delete a photo only once.
Fear of this type of thing can be crippling. I’m an introvert and still retain some of my teenager’s shyness when out shooting. This psychological block has been the biggest hurdle to me getting better at street photography. You just have to be bold and press through any shyness if you want to get good at street photography.
Approaches to Street Photography
I use two approaches to street photography: prowling and sitting.
When I prowl, I move up the street like a panther, scanning the space ahead and around me for scenes. When I see what looks like an interesting scene or face, I compose and shoot quickly.
When I sit (stand, actually), I find a backdrop that looks like it would make an interesting composition—say, a shop window with interesting lettering, or a brick wall marked by a slash of shadow. Then, I wait for someone to walk past and time the shutter release to catch the person mid-stride or making a gesture.
I’m a fidgety, so Ido more prowling than standing. Winogrand was a famous prowler. You can see by the composition of some of Cartier-Bresson’s iconic images that he often waited for someone to enter a scene that he’d presumably pre-selected.
Gear and Settings
The iconic street shooters of yesteryear generally used 35mm rangefinders (usually Leicas)because a rangefinder is smaller and easier to conceal than a larger SLR.
Today several companies make good digital rangefinders. I prefer the Fujifilm Xpro 2, others swear by the Fujifilm X100V (both crop sensor).
Leica makes superb digital rangefinders but they’re too expensive for most people. Sony and Ricoh also make small and affordable point-and-shoot digital cameras that are good for street photography.
I’ve found thatDSLRs, because they’re larger and more noticeable, aren’t well suited for street photography.
Ditto zoom lenses.Fast primes lenses (f/1.4 or f/2.8, max) are the way to go, with either 28mm or35mm being the go-to for most street shooters, because of the ability of those wide-angle lenses to include more elements from a street scene in the image. A fast 50mm lens is probably the second most popular street photography lens. Cartier-Bresson used a 50mm almost exclusively; Winogrand a 28mm.
I will sometime rock two bodies when out street shooting—one with a 35mm, the other with a 135mm telephoto. The long lens lets me compose with a 35mm angle of view from across the street and allows me to both get in close for impromptu portraits and compress compositional elements.
For camera settings, stick to a wide aperture, say f/8-f/16, if the light will allow. Again, context is important and generally for street photography you want as much of the scene as sharp as possible, front to back. Set your shutter to at least f/125 (f/160is even better) to freeze the motion of passersby. There’s a good argument to be made for using even faster shutter speeds. For instance, Winogrand and his acolytes would use Kodak Tri-X, a 400 ISO film, pushed to 1000 ISO, so that they could shoot at wide apertures and 1/1000th of a second in broad daylight.
A word about color.Classic street photography was shot on black-and-white film and this look is still considered the baseline for modern street photography. But Meyerowitz revolutionized the use of color for street photography. I usually make my digital street photos black-and-white. I make my digital street photos color only if the colors in the scene inspired the composition. When I shoot street photography on film, I always use black-and-white film.
What to Shoot
So what is street photography? What kind of images should you be looking to make?
Basically, street photography is people watching, with a camera. Capture people doing the things that makes humans fascinating—laughing, crying, kissing. stumbling, flipping someone off, pawing through garbage.
Don’t look only for gestures or movement. A man wearing a fright wig and galoshes, standing motionless as he waits to cross the street, is also an example of fascinating behavior.
You can also combine humdrum behavior with background elements to great effect. For example, an average person striding past a mural. Ideally, there would be some link—some“rhyme,” if you will—between the person and the mural that allows you to, on some level, say something about our world by making the image (here’s a great example).
Conclusion
Street photography is a great way to get some low-impact exercise, improve your composition and camera-handling skills, and meet people. I heartily recommend it.
https://pdnonline.com/photography-business/legal/street-photography-and-the-law-what-you-need-to-know/#:~:text=This%20type%20of%20photography%20is,anyone%20else%20with%20a%20camera.
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