Caporegime
Those are very good indeed!
Are New Yorkers so used to camera that you can just snap them going about their business without any objections or do you employ a low-profile technique to get these captures?
If I had the money, it would go on a Panasonic GX8 with the tilt rear LCD to mate with my PanaLeica 15mm f1.7 to try my hand at street photography.
Ah, I feel that I’ve failed a Photography 101 spot quiz by not clocking that everyone and everything stationary or moving slowly is in perfect focus from foreground to far, far away.
Very sneaky indeed to use a DJ1 Pocket like that as most people probably thought it was a vape device!
I went last year on the July 4th celebrations, was brilliant, going again this November, going to be staying in Brooklyn this time visiting family. Love NYC, the only area I dislike is midtown, where Times Square is, I try to avoid that area when walking.
Last easter we went for a week and had 2 days in washington. Washington is really nice and a much much much slower pace. We stayed next door but one to the whitehouse.....
We made the mistake of staying in the same hotel for 3 years running now. We should have stayed in Brooklyn. Spent a day at coney island which was a nice mistake as we got on the wrong train and thought ah buggar it might as well stay on..lol
I was going to wait a bit longer to see if people notice.
1 - There is no DoF to the photos
2 - It is taken at stomach height in a lot of them
3 - It is an ultra-wide
I took all those with a DJI Pocket, using a time lapse feature. What it does is it takes a photo every X second and stitch them together to make a .MOV file for a time lapse but you also get a folder with all the JPEG images. So I cheated, the camera just keep taking photos as I walk through NYC.
Ah, I thought they looked good. Hate it when most of the picture is out of focus.
Ah, I thought they looked good. Hate it when most of the picture is out of focus.
Sort of Vivian Maier approach (torso height camera position) but minus the atmosphere due to the difference era. All my street now is with a 35mm, I like to be part of the story a lot more now than maybe before!
Purely preferential, back in the early days Bresson/Maier etc employed depth of field in their street photography as did many others. I don't know why in modern times a small minority hate on any type of bokeh and only want to see everything in focus really. I know many overuse bokeh but those are obvious most of the time. Subject isolation goes hand in hand with composition to complete the story. I can understand why some might hate it as some use dof as a means to make up for lack of composition or timing.