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Oct 09 2016

Street Shot Sundays
Photo of the Week:
“Head Out”

Saigon Shooter Files-38

Street Shot Sundays Story & Stats

Story:

This Sunday’s Street Shot of the Week was taken in the Gò Vấp district of Ho Chi Minh City, Vietnam. Gò Vấp is a district in the northwest of Saigon, just above the international airport. Having the airport right inside the city can provide some interesting captures from the planes flying so low over the buildings. This urban district also has some nice little alley neighborhoods and markets for street photography.

I was exploring the winding, narrow alleys with some local street photographers. It was pretty quiet, but around a corner, we came across a few people outside their home. Out of the corner of my eye I saw an older women quickly pop her head out of her curtain door. She popped back inside before I had a chance to capture it, but I decided to get my camera ready just in case she came out again. 

Sure enough, only a few seconds later, out popped her head. At the same time, I saw a little boy watching me in the door window’s reflection. So just as she looked to talk to someone in the street, I snapped the photo to include them both. It doesn’t get much friendlier than here so she had a good laugh about it before going back inside, while some of the curious kids gathered around to check out my camera.

Stats:

  • Camera: Fujifilm Xpro1
  • Lens: Fujinon XF 18mm 
  • Focal Length: 18mm (27mm full frame equivalent)
  • Aperture: f/5.6
  • Shutter Speed: 1/500
  • ISO: 1600

Saigon Shooter Files-38

Written by f.d. walker · Categorized: Files, Ho Chi Minh City, Photos, Shooter Files Series, Shot of the Week, Street Photography, Street Shot Sundays, Travel Photography, Vietnam

Oct 07 2016

The Friday 5
(October 7th, 2016)

FRIDAY-5-COVER

5 Photographic Links for Your Weekend

Discover

Photographer of the week: Stephen Leslie

Watch

Video of the Week: Alex Webb’s “La Calle” Gives Voice to the Streets of Mexico

Read

Article of the Week: What We See When We Look At Travel Photography

Travel

Photography Destination of the Week: Casablanca, Morocco

Look

InstaGram of the week: @ola_billmont

ola-insta

Written by f.d. walker · Categorized: Files, Friday 5, Shooter Files Series, Street Photography

Oct 05 2016

7 First Impressions of Hong Kong
(From a Street Photography Perspective)

hong-kong-impressions-cover

Unfortunately, I haven’t had great luck with weather in Hong Kong. Mostly clouds and rain instead of sun. And while that can be frustrating, clouds can’t cover the fact that Hong Kong is a one of a kind city full of character, variety and interest. A densely populated multi-cultural city that shows the future in one direction and the past in another, all wrapped up into one of the better big city experiences I’ve had. Clouds and all.

Hong Kong Shooter Files-7

So here are my first impressions of Hong Kong, from my personal Street Photographer perspective…

[Read more…] about 7 First Impressions of Hong Kong (From a Street Photography Perspective)

Written by f.d. walker · Categorized: Featured File, Files, First Impressions, Hong Kong, Shooter Files Series, Street Photography, Travel, Travel Photography

Oct 03 2016

33 Street Photography Photos from Three Months in Ho Chi Minh City, Vietnam

Saigon-33-cover

Ho Chi Minh City, Vietnam became my base this year, and a chance to stay in one spot during all my travel. That being said, I was only able to spend 3 months there so far before leaving to Europe for the summer. And some of that time was spent traveling outside the city. Still, 2+ months, while having an apartment in the heart of Saigon, gave me plenty of time to explore and photograph this lively city.

Saigon Shooter Files-22

But for now, here’s 33 photos that I was able to capture during my time in Saigon…

[Read more…] about 33 Street Photography Photos from Three Months in Ho Chi Minh City, Vietnam

Written by f.d. walker · Categorized: 33 Street Photos, Featured File, Files, Ho Chi Minh City, Photos, Saigon, Shooter Files Series, Street Photography, Travel Photography, Vietnam

Oct 02 2016

Street Shot Sundays
Photo of the Week:
“Window Dust”

Saigon Shooter Files-4

Street Shot Sundays Story & Stats

Story:

This Sunday’s Street Shot of the Week was taken by Nguyen Hue Street in Ho Chi Minh City, Vietnam. Also called Walking Street, Nguyen Hue is the first pedestrian-only street in Ho Chi Minh City. The French colonial styled City Hall and Ho Chi Minh statue sit here, which brings tourists during the day, but at night is when it gets busy. Especially on weekend nights, it becomes a gathering place for young locals, tourists, and street performers.

In addition to the activity Nguyen Hue Street attracts, the area is lined with restaurants and cafes. I was a block away from Walking Street, just as the the sun was about to set, when I saw how the low light was hitting this restaurant. The bright red chairs against the black shadow first caught my eye, with the subtle reflection of the buildings in the string curtains, but then this lady holding a colorful duster started cleaning the window sill. I took a few photos, but liked this one where she shortly glanced at me the best. 

Stats:

  • Camera: Fujifilm Xpro1
  • Lens: Fujinon XF 18mm 
  • Focal Length: 18mm (27mm full frame equivalent)
  • Aperture: f/11
  • Shutter Speed: 1/500
  • ISO: 800

Saigon Shooter Files-4

Written by f.d. walker · Categorized: Files, Ho Chi Minh City, Shooter Files Series, Street Photography, Street Shot Sundays, Vietnam

Sep 30 2016

The Friday 5
(September 30th, 2016)

FRIDAY-5-COVER

5 Photographic Links for Your Weekend

Discover

Photographer of the week: Pierre Belhassen

Watch

Video of the Week: Jeff Mermelstein – Media Matters

Read

Article of the Week: The 100 Best Photographs Ever Taken without Photoshop

It’s not street, but I don’t care. There’s some interesting photos in there.

Travel

Photography Destination of the Week: Fes, Morocco

Look

InstaGram of the week: @paubuscato

pauinsta

Written by f.d. walker · Categorized: Files, Friday 5, Shooter Files Series, Street Photography

Sep 28 2016

City Street Guides by f.d. walker:
A Street Photography Guide to
Hyderabad, India

hyderabad-guide-cover

*A series of guides on shooting Street Photography in cities around the world. Find the best spots to shoot, things to capture, safety concerns, street tips, and more for cities around the world. I have personally researched, explored and shot Street Photography in every city that I create a guide for. So you can be ready to capture the streets as soon as you step outside with your camera!

Hyderabad

[Read more…] about City Street Guides by f.d. walker: A Street Photography Guide to Hyderabad, India

Written by f.d. walker · Categorized: City Street Guides, Featured File, Files, Guides, Hyderabad, India, Shooter Files Series, Street Photography, Travel, Travel Photography

Sep 26 2016

7 Tips for Seeing in Color in Street Photography

seeing-in-color-cover
Pattaya, Thailand

*The “Capture Color Series” covers different tips and lessons on Color Street Photography

For another installment in the Capture Color Series, I’ll cover some tips to help with seeing in color when out shooting in color. Of course, most of us already see in color just fine, but I’m talking about its relation to capturing better color photos. If you’re out shooting black & white photography, you need to see things differently than you do when shooting in color. If you can look around you and really see the colors, know how they can affect a photo, and be able to capture a color photo the way you saw it, then you’ve learned how to see in color with your photography.

color-photos-1
Mumbai, India

Here are 7 tips to, hopefully, help with seeing in color in street photography.

7 Tips for Seeing in Color in Street Photography

 

1. Look for Color

First you have to find color before you can capture it. Luckily color is all around us, but you do have to keep your eyes open for it. Not all color is created equal, either, so what you’re looking for can depend on your vision and style too. Maybe you like bright colors, light colors, dark colors, or colors that give a certain mood. Maybe you like the light a certain way for your colors, maybe you like multiple combinations of colors in your scene, or maybe you like to use only one color highlighted.  If you know what you like, then you don’t have to try to look for it. It will find you.

i-love-color-7-of-12
Ho Chi Minh City, Vietnam

So, where to look for color then? Everywhere. City blocks can supply colorful buildings, signs, advertisements, and more. Nature can bring you intense colors too, like the green of the grass or the blue of the sky. Then, of course, you have people, whom can supply colors from what they wear to their hair. Even the light supplies different shades of colors. No matter where you are, the colors are out there. You just have to look.

2. But Don’t Make Color Your Only Focus

Don’t take tip #1 too seriously or you’ll just end up photographing different colors instead of making a good photo. You have to look for more than just a color, while also not focusing too much on the act of looking. You want to be relaxed and free so things can find you.

color-photos-2
Amsterdam, Netherlands

This brings to mind my all-time least favorite quote by Ted Grant:

“When you photograph people in color, you photograph their clothes. But when you photograph people in Black and white, you photograph their souls!”

Without going into detail why I dislike this quote so much, if you’re shooting in color and take this quote to heart then you’re cutting your potential short. If you look to use color as a way to add life to a frame that already holds interest, then you can reach that potential. 

i-love-color-11-of-12
Hanoi, Vietnam

Many Black & white street photographers like to look for lines, light, shadows, shapes and tones, but this can also be applied to color work too. Color work doesn’t need to be focused only on style, either. Capturing moments and scenes can be brought alive with the use of color. For the strongest photos, just like with black & white, color can work to enhance the photos interest, not be its only interest.

3. Pay Attention to the Variety of Colors in the Scene

One of the more difficult aspects of color street photography is dealing with the number of colors that can fight for attention in a scene. The world is filled with a variety of colors and shades so you have to pay attention to this. Not all colors work well together. You might want the photo to focus on specific elements/subjects, but then a color in the background steals the focus. Or maybe the scene is a clutter of different colors that looks messy instead of appealing. 

i-love-color-2-of-12
Marrakech, Morocco

On the other side of the spectrum, you can use different colors together to create more interest. Learning Color Theory can teach you how colors work together and what combinations work well for your vision. For example, complementary colors like red and green not only look good together, but they create contrast to make the other stand out. Finding these color combinations in the street can really help capture a beautiful color photo.

4. Feel the Mood of Colors

Color creates mood and can have emotional meaning. We react differently to different colors and they can bring up thoughts and feelings. Some of this comes from our experiences and memories, while others are basic reactions born into us. Think of a red sports car or red lipstick. Compare that to the blue of the ocean or green of the grass. These colors give meaning and mood to a photo.

i-love-color-10-of-12
Hong Kong

Photographer Joel Meyerowitz describes color much more articulately than I ever could:

“Color describes more things…I really mean the sensation I get from things – their surface and color – my memory of them in other conditions as well as their connotative qualities. Color plays itself out along a richer band of feelings—more wavelengths, more radiance, more sensation. I wanted to see more and experience more feelings from a photograph….The fact is that color film appears to be responsive to the full spectrum of visible light while black and white reduces the spectrum to a very narrow wavelength. This stimulates in the user of each material a different set of responses. A color photograph gives you a chance to study and remember how things look and feel in color. It enables you to have feelings along the full wavelength of the spectrum, to retrieve emotions that were perhaps bred in you from infancy—from the warmth and pinkness of your mother’s breast, the loving brown of you puppy’s face, and the friendly yellow of your pudding. Color is always part of experience. Grass is green, not gray; flesh is color, not gray. Black and white is a very cultivated response.”

When you look at color in this way, you see how powerfully it can be used in photography.

i-love-color-1-of-1
Marrakech, Morocco

5. Look at the Light

Light really affects color. It changes the shade, tone, saturation and intensity. You can shoot a scene in bright sunlight and then shoot the same scene seconds later after cloud coverage and the colors and mood completely change. Color doesn’t handle overexposure well at all, it can easily remove much of the color itself, along with any saturation. Shadows or under exposure, however, will darken and flatten much of the color. So you need to look at the light and make sure your exposure settings go along with how you’re looking to capture the color.

i-love-color-9-of-12
Bangkok, Thailand

Exposure can’t do everything, though. No matter how hard you try, a cloudy day will never look the same as a sunny one. Most of my photos are shot with bright light because of how it brings out the colors when exposed for the highlights. You’ll see many well-known photographers prefer bright light too, like Alex Webb and Constantine Manos. These type of colors can’t be done without the sun. Just like the somber, more depressed colors come out better with grey skies or cover, which some photographers prefer for mood and look. Colors come from light, so it’s as important as anything in color photography.

6. See Like Your Camera

Your camera doesn’t see like your eyes do. Our eyes expose for different parts of the scene at the same time and can give us a very different picture than the actual picture captured. So just as light affects colors, how the camera sees and captures the light differently than our eyes is important to learn. Since your eyes aren’t processing the photo, you need to see like your camera. 

Color Combinations-2-4
Lviv, Ukraine

This means if you see the sunlight creating a high contrast scene, you’ll know that the shadows will be darker than your eyes see, as long as you expose for the highlights. You can use this to your advantage to create shadows and mood that your eyes wouldn’t create, though. If instead, you want to bring out those shadows, you need to be very careful it doesn’t blowout the highlights. If you see like your camera, you can control the light and create something even better than your eyes could see. 

i-love-color-3-of-12
Chefchaouen, Morocco

Color noise and blur, among others, are a couple of reasons photos can look better in black & white. This is because color can look much worse when not shot ideally, as it brings out these “negatives,” while black & white can hide or make them look more pleasing. If you’re shooting in color, you really need to be aware of how the camera will see and create the image, based on things like light and camera settings.

7. Study the Work of Other Color Photographers

One way of the best ways to learn how to see in color is to study the work of others. 

Harry Gruyaert, Martin Parr, Alex Webb, Saul Leiter, Joel Meyerowitz, and William Eggleston are some of the biggest names and pioneers in color photography. Study their work and see how they capture color. Try to think what they saw in real life in order to capture a photo, and its colors, the way they did.

To finish off, below are 10 examples from 10 of the best:

23
© Harry Gruyaert
Eggleston - Red Hair
© William Eggleston
© Alex Webb
Parr - Blue Sun Goggles
© Martin Parr
fred-herzog
© Fred Herzog
saul-leiter-3-448x660
© Saul Leiter
image11-800x538
© Constantine Manos
58716_9714_green-car-custom-660x430
© Helen Levitt
meyerowitz
© Joel Meyerowitz
© Gueorgui Pinkhassov

 

If you have any thoughts or tips of your own for seeing in color, please comment below!  Cheers and good luck capturing color.

 

 

Written by f.d. walker · Categorized: Capture Color, Color, Featured File, Files, Shooter Files Series, Street Photography, Tips

Sep 25 2016

Street Shot Sundays
Photo of the Week:
“Saigon Stretch”

Saigon Shooter Files-36

Street Shot Sundays Story & Stats

Story:

This Sunday’s Street Shot of the Week was taken in Ho Chi Minh City, Vietnam at September 23 Park (Công viên 23 tháng 9). This park stretches multiple blocks along Phạm Ngũ Lão street up to Ben Thanh Market. So it’s in the heart of the city right by the touristic backpacker district and ends at the city’s most famous market, making it one of the busier spots in the city. You get a mix of locals and tourists, different events, students looking to practice english, people playing shuttlecock, and people exercising like the man in this pic.

Saigon has these exercise stations in parks all over the city. They’re for very simple exercises that don’t take much strength and seem to be used by the city’s elderly more than anybody. This can create some humorous scenes. They rarely dress in exercise clothes, but they’re rarely breaking much of a sweat, either. This man was a different story, though. He was giving full effort in his button-up shirt. 

He was doing this ab workout where he’d bring his legs up and down, while also stretching them in and out at the same time. So I decided to capture a shot of this funny scene right when his legs were fully out and his facial expression showed all that effort he was putting into his routine.

Stats:

  • Camera: Fujifilm Xpro1
  • Lens: Fujinon XF 18mm 
  • Focal Length: 18mm (27mm full frame equivalent)
  • Aperture: f/11
  • Shutter Speed: 1/500
  • ISO: 1600

Saigon Shooter Files-36

Written by f.d. walker · Categorized: Files, Ho Chi Minh City, Photos, Saigon, Shooter Files Series, Shot of the Week, Street Photography, Street Shot Sundays, Travel Photography, Vietnam

Sep 23 2016

The Friday 5
(September 23rd, 2016)

FRIDAY-5-COVER

5 Photographic Links for Your Weekend

Discover

Photographer of the week: Marta Rybicka

Watch

Video of the Week: Behind the Photo: The Falling Man

Read

Article of the Week: Man Illegally Documents Trip to North Korea

Travel

Photography Destination of the Week: Budapest, Hungary

Look

InstaGram of the week: @ferriswhiskey

ferris-insta

 

Written by f.d. walker · Categorized: Files, Friday 5, Shooter Files Series, Street Photography

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