Thursday 12 June 2014

Street Confidence

Firstly I'm know expert but I believe in sharing knowledge, ideas and views, that way we can learn from each other at whatever level we are at.

The fascinating thing about photography is that there's so many different forms or areas we can cover, anything from still photography, sports, wildlife and street photography as just some to mention. For me I've not found one area that I prefer over another, maybe because I'm doing it more as a hobby that I'm looking to take the one step further in doing a foundation degree in professional photography which is over three years as a part time course and I hope that maybe it will give me a step up in the world of photography, if not then I will at least have a lot more under my belt to do photography in what ever way it comes.

My personal view is that when you get into photography, you start to see the world around you in a different way. For that photograph you see an image in your head of how you would like to see it as a print or a visual aid on a screen. Soon as you put that viewfinder to your eye you begin to move the focal length and angle of the camera to the point that you decide to press that button. If your like me or others your change the angle and camera view so many times that you end up taking maybe 5, 10 or more images of the same thing. Its not till you get home and you load them onto your PC and scan through them all, you start to weed out the ones that for what ever reason you feel don't work and your left with maybe 2 or 3 that has something for you to work on.
Then the work begins as you decide in what form the image is to be in its colour range, this could be anything from B&W, tinted, HDR or just colour, what ever comes into your head may again change so many times which is the great thing about digital is that you can make as many copies as you want to try different effects until you have the final image that your happy with.
Some forms of photography don't involve people, children, animals which are probably some of the hardest things to photograph as they don't always do what you when you want. Then there's photography that involves people, children and animals that are in the environment of the street.


Have you ever herd of the term people watching? You can sit on on one of those benches that I reckon is put there for the population to take the weight off their feet while their better half is busy in the shop and could be there for some time. 
If you sit there and watch the people that go pass you or are in the foreground doing something which could be just looking at something in a window or in their view that as an image would be an interesting subject. People, children and animals can do the funniest or interesting things from the point of view as a photographic image to be captured. Their looks or mannerisms can be captivating and it doesn't have to be just a single person, it could be a group of people and you just wished you had your camera to capture it.

Today we live in a world of images, why, because everyone has a camera on them that capture stills and video, this is how most of the social websites have grasped on to the fact and want people to have their devices in their hands at all times to get that image and load it up on there social network. Sadly something's are captured that can be devastating and upsetting with the initial view, but that can be used as a positive to help protect us from things or people that cause such things to happen that we sadly caught on our devices. This has only come about in the what last 6-7 years with the devices and social networks being as good as they are.

When someone holds up a mobile phone to take pictures, nobody really takes much notice, someone with a DSLR in there hands do stand out if there in an area where they are the only one taking photos so it does attract attention and takes someone to so bold to do so. But if your in a place where tourist are in their swarms with their DSL's or DSLR's, nobody takes any notice, strange isn't it. But as practice to do street photography, its a great place to start and importantly build your confidence in taking photos of people, children and animals.
In three ours you can capture around about 170 or more images, that's plenty to work on for a three hour session. If you take the part of watching people and using your camera to capture those moments or interesting people, you can build up those all important skills.
A street has not just the tourist but the shoppers and the people on their way to work, or on a lunch break and those benches filled with with the people taking the weight off their feet that I mention earlier. So when you spot something you have to time yourself lifting viewfinder to your eye and being in the right focal length that's near enough and lastly nobody getting in the way of the you pressing that shutter.

What I've learnt is a few things to that you can do to get things ready to be able to capture that shot.
If you have a camera that you can adjust the viewfinder to give what's called eye relief which is where you can see the info that's around the edge of the view that you see while taking the photo. Most people close the other eye when there taking a photo, but you can adjust it so that you can have both eyes open. The advantage is that when you see the image you want to capture you can see in front of you things or people that might get in the way, you can time it so that you can view through the viewfinder and then see when then object or person is going to pass so you can get that image.
The other thing is playing with the focal length so that you know roughly what it will be if 25 feet away and say another point that's only 15 feet away. So again when you see an image, you can turn the focal length up as you bring the camera up to your eye, it helps safe time in trying to get that focal length almost there and saving lost of time.

Just these two things can help and does take practice which you can do at home or in the back garden or in a park.

To move up your game to not needing the tourist to kinda hide behind just needs you to be subtle in your approach. Going up to someone and asking if you can take the photo can seem a bit daunting but what's the worse they can, no, so you move on. If your taking photos and someone asks you what you photographing, then be up front and tell them your doing street photography, but you don't have to go into the whole technical side about it all, if there that interested let them google it.
As it stands in the UK we don't need permission to take photos and until that day changes we should snap away, but if they ever did and this goes for the rest of the world, how do you stop all those people that includes us from not taking photos, its un policeable.

I hope that maybe someone finds this useful if its a thing that they want to have ago at but has never been sure on how to go about it. There is some great and interesting people and moments out there waiting for you to capture, so have fun and get out there and have a go.

Thanks for reading, AndyD  

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