Thanks for sharing your tips. Another technique that I use is to hold my camera to my face but to continuously move it, as though I'm panning the whole area. When my lens points to my subject, I press the shutter release but continue to pan. That way, the person might think that I'm simply taking in my surroundings through my lens, rather than capturing them. If somebody sees you looking around through your lens, without stopping on them, they often become used to you doing this and may stop noticing you. Cheers!
Great tips. I might add... A small, battered camera that takes photos quietly rather than a big 'pro' camera - or one with a chrome finish. Public events and crowded, bustling places where folks are preoccupied: a great way to get good shots unnoticed. Operating the camera whilst in motion and not looking down at the thing works well too, Learning to notice potential subjects, without looking at them. Having several strategies is good - the more the photographer knows, lets them to adapt and improvise for each situation.
Gary Winogrand was a master of technique #2. Love technique #5. A variation is if you have a camera with a touch screen set it up to touch to focus and the fire the shutter. If your finger isn’t touching the shutter you aren’t taking a photograph, right? Also use the electronic shutter for silent shutter. Mask On Nurse Marty (Ret)
Yes, technique 2 - seeming 'inept and confused'. I'd heard him mentioned at college but didn't know his photos or technique until after starting taking street pics myself. I began using the technique without knowing it was his. Spot on about turning on the electronic shutter.
I do street photography and have used some of the tips you mentioned. I live in New York City and have learned to look past my actual subject and to play dumb. The matching clothing was something I never thought about. What a great idea, thank you! I don’t hang the camera around my neck as that signals that I have a camera. Instead I have my camera on a wrist strap and keep my hand by my side. Most people do not notice I even have a camera. When taking a photo I hold my camera at neck level and take the shot through the back LCD. I never look through the eye piece part as that telegrams that I am taking a photo. I love the remote shot concept and will try it out. If you are in New York City it would be nice to meet you, take some street photography photos. Lastly I sometimes use my Nikon P950 which has incredible zoom. With the P950 I can take a photo of people, who take the full frame of the photo, but they are a city block away. Look up the camera. In a typical city no one see you from a block away through the throngs of people.
The really best tip given in this video is to use an app to steer a camera dangling down from your neck. Everybody thinks you are doing something on your smartphone and that the camera is inactive.
Brilliant advise thank you. I think I discovered technique #2 yesterday as I'm walking along the street glancing down at the LCD looking sort of confused (because I literally was as the lens wasn't focusing correctly and I was kind of annoyed) and back and forth between the camera and the street and catching every one of the way who didn't really pay any attention.
Great tips, Oliver! And I am familiar with all the methods (except the last one with the app, because it still doesn’t work great), even if I was not consciously using them. Greetings from Düsseldorf!
Hi Jochen thank you so much for your feedback, so happy to read! The app method is not my favorite as well, but it worked for me in subways where i normally wouldn't dare to raise my camera. Have a great day, best from Berlin☺️
I legit point the camera and take the photo, full eye contact :D Ive been even considering using full flash. Ive had a few occasions where people complain but mostly its been ok id say.
Took me only 2 seconds to realize this is in Berlin xD I also have a Fujifilm and was thinking about using my iPhone to take pictures but it seems the app doesnt work for high speed burst. Does someone knows an app for Fujifilm that includes taking burst pictures? Best regards from Prenzlauer Berg!
Hi Stefan! I think there is only the Fuji X app, and this one only works for a certain fraction of Fuji cameras, so i guess it won´t work with burst mode...cheers from Fhain!
The thing holding me back the most from going outside to shoot is the idea of getting in trouble here in germany for taking pictures of random people. Have you ever had any issues with that? And if so, how bad is it?
Hi! I think it´s not that bad. But you need to shoot differently than , i.e. in Asia. More distance shots, more fishing with silhouettes, and then you are safe in 99% of all situations. The Bundesgerichtshof is even recognizing candid Street Photography as a form of art since 2018(Kunstfreiheit vs. Recht am eigenen Bild) Just be unobstrusive, kind and patient, then Germany is a great place for Street Photography.
Ich hab nur 1 mal eine kleine Auseinandersetzung gehabt, allerdings habe ich damals auch einem Deutsche Bahn Beamten die Kamera direkt ins Gesicht gehalten, und hatte dann auch länger Augenktontakt mit ihm bzw bin neben ihm stehem geblieben. Er wollte dass ich das Foto lösche, sonst würde er zur Polizei. Da es auf Film war, habe ich ihm die Rolle gegeben. (Würde ich nie wieder tun, und solltest du auch nicht) Man kann auch je nach Situation die Leute ansprechen ohne dass das Bild danach gestellt aussieht.
Hallo Michael, oha - das klingt nach einer heftigen Situation - wahrscheinlich hättest du es rein rechtlich nicht gemusst, aber ich denke ich hätte in so einer Situation auch deeskalierend reagiert - gab ja keine Möglichkeit sich der Situation zu entziehen im Zug...Ja, stellen funktioniert teilweise, das stimmt@@michelwunderlich4861
@@streetphotographyguyes war tatsächlich am Bahnhof in Frankfurt und nicht IM Zug Die Rolle hatte aber sowieso erst 6 oder 7 aufnahmen und die Polizei stand da auch schon vor Ort. (Ich glaube da steht immer Polizei, aus Sicherheitsgründen) Habe mich versucht zu erklären was ich mache und hab versucht das logisch rüber zu bringen aber er wollte nicht. Ich habe aber daraus gelernt ;) Danke für dein Video.
Most of my shots are taken from my chest with my thumb, just casually holding my camera with my eyes looking the other way or looking down at the flip screen.
You should include your portfolio in the description, so would be easy to check how seriously to take your advices. Now i cant see even your name so i could google your work.
Hi! Links to my Instagram, Twitter and to my 2 websites are on my channel page - but you are right - i should put it in the description as well, thanks for the tip!
I use a wide angle lens which captures more than the subject but that can be cropped later. With a wide angle lens you can take a photo of a subject when they are almost past you and they would never know. Another thing I do is to take a picture of a subject and once I lower the camera from my face I look past the subject as if looking at what I had photographed. The subject tends to think I shot the photo of something behind them.
Sorry as these are tips for beginners, as I ignore most of them and just point and shoot! I just do it as quick and as fast as possible and keep walking!
@@streetphotographyguy you could have used synonyms such as "unnoticeable" "concealed" etc... In case you hesitate with pronunciation just google the word, there is a phonetic transcription right below the word plus a button to hear it pronounced correctly, hope this helps! Greats tips btw, this doesn't affect the quality of the content
@streetphotographyguy Loved your video! Excellent advice. I understood you perfectly. Thank you so much for sharing. If and when I do street photography, I will try using a Rolleiflex. Somehow, raising a camera to eye level seems intrusive to many people. I liked your comment about starting a conversation with your subject. That's important in many circumstances.
Tip #6: make sure your flash is on. The blinding light will distract your subject and temporarily stun them so you have plenty of time to scamper off.
...with their camera.
Bruce Gilden basically
Not only that you will get crap photos but still become famous because people love to watch other people acting like assholes.
Dress like Vivian Maier, nanny dress + floppy hat. Thank me later.
Sounds great, will try 😁🙌🙌🙌
switch off the focus assist light. It attracts unnessesary attention.
Thanks for sharing your tips. Another technique that I use is to hold my camera to my face but to continuously move it, as though I'm panning the whole area. When my lens points to my subject, I press the shutter release but continue to pan. That way, the person might think that I'm simply taking in my surroundings through my lens, rather than capturing them. If somebody sees you looking around through your lens, without stopping on them, they often become used to you doing this and may stop noticing you. Cheers!
Great tips.
I might add...
A small, battered camera that takes photos quietly rather than a big 'pro' camera - or one with a chrome finish.
Public events and crowded, bustling places where folks are preoccupied: a great way to get good shots unnoticed.
Operating the camera whilst in motion and not looking down at the thing works well too,
Learning to notice potential subjects, without looking at them. Having several strategies is good - the more the photographer knows, lets them to adapt and improvise for each situation.
Gary Winogrand was a master of technique #2.
Love technique #5. A variation is if you have a camera with a touch screen set it up to touch to focus and the fire the shutter. If your finger isn’t touching the shutter you aren’t taking a photograph, right? Also use the electronic shutter for silent shutter.
Mask On Nurse Marty (Ret)
Yes, technique 2 - seeming 'inept and confused'. I'd heard him mentioned at college but didn't know his photos or technique until after starting taking street pics myself. I began using the technique without knowing it was his. Spot on about turning on the electronic shutter.
I do street photography and have used some of the tips you mentioned. I live in New York City and have learned to look past my actual subject and to play dumb. The matching clothing was something I never thought about. What a great idea, thank you! I don’t hang the camera around my neck as that signals that I have a camera. Instead I have my camera on a wrist strap and keep my hand by my side. Most people do not notice I even have a camera.
When taking a photo I hold my camera at neck level and take the shot through the back LCD. I never look through the eye piece part as that telegrams that I am taking a photo. I love the remote shot concept and will try it out. If you are in New York City it would be nice to meet you, take some street photography photos.
Lastly I sometimes use my Nikon P950 which has incredible zoom. With the P950 I can take a photo of people, who take the full frame of the photo, but they are a city block away. Look up the camera. In a typical city no one see you from a block away through the throngs of people.
1) get the smallest camera and lens combo
2) get retro looking camera
100% true mate 🙏🙌🙌🙌
3) carry 2 cameras on your body. Makes you look like a professional photographer working a job.
The really best tip given in this video is to use an app to steer a camera dangling down from your neck. Everybody thinks you are doing something on your smartphone and that the camera is inactive.
Brilliant advise thank you. I think I discovered technique #2 yesterday as I'm walking along the street glancing down at the LCD looking sort of confused (because I literally was as the lens wasn't focusing correctly and I was kind of annoyed) and back and forth between the camera and the street and catching every one of the way who didn't really pay any attention.
Fantastic!!! Yes, by mimicking to film people seem to care far less. Strange, but good for us ;) Cheers!
Awesome work and great tips, even for an old timer like me.
Thank you so much for your kind feedback Louis🙏
Viewing and understanding the tips on my laptop and clicking the like button on my mobile phone. 👍.
Very entertaining performance - Cheers.
Great advices :D good job! As an internet stranger, just wanna extend my gratitude for this video. Keep up the good work.
Thank you so much mate, happy to read!
Great tips! Thanks for sharing
I do the construction worker in my industrial city. Even with yellow signal jacket you disappear.
This is great! Need to try this😊😁🙏🙏🙏
Great. Love from Pakistan
Great tips, Oliver! And I am familiar with all the methods (except the last one with the app, because it still doesn’t work great), even if I was not consciously using them. Greetings from Düsseldorf!
Hi Jochen thank you so much for your feedback, so happy to read! The app method is not my favorite as well, but it worked for me in subways where i normally wouldn't dare to raise my camera. Have a great day, best from Berlin☺️
Great tips... thanx
Love the Tips! Especially the last one! :D
the video tip is a surprisingly good one! but the top one would be to use your phone, nothing beats that
Loved this video. Thanks for sharing
oaky wow that is actually super helpful
Thank you for your kind feedback!
Having a DSLR doesn't help due to the loud click of the mirror movement.
In a noisy environment (or one that's crowded or busy) it's less noticeable, but I agree, a quieter camera is certainly better
I legit point the camera and take the photo, full eye contact :D Ive been even considering using full flash. Ive had a few occasions where people complain but mostly its been ok id say.
Took me only 2 seconds to realize this is in Berlin xD I also have a Fujifilm and was thinking about using my iPhone to take pictures but it seems the app doesnt work for high speed burst. Does someone knows an app for Fujifilm that includes taking burst pictures? Best regards from Prenzlauer Berg!
Hi Stefan! I think there is only the Fuji X app, and this one only works for a certain fraction of Fuji cameras, so i guess it won´t work with burst mode...cheers from Fhain!
Great tips, thank you!
Thank you for your feedback! Have a great day
would a rangefinder style camera Fuj x-pro 2 be less conspicuous than a dslr like a Fuji XT3?
As the Fuji x Pro 2 is smaller, i'd definitely prefer it to the XT3 for most occasions...
These are good tips
Super Video, Oli!
Vielen Dank lieber Ralph, das freut mich sehr!!!
The thing holding me back the most from going outside to shoot is the idea of getting in trouble here in germany for taking pictures of random people. Have you ever had any issues with that? And if so, how bad is it?
Hi! I think it´s not that bad. But you need to shoot differently than , i.e. in Asia. More distance shots, more fishing with silhouettes, and then you are safe in 99% of all situations. The Bundesgerichtshof is even recognizing candid Street Photography as a form of art since 2018(Kunstfreiheit vs. Recht am eigenen Bild) Just be unobstrusive, kind and patient, then Germany is a great place for Street Photography.
Ich hab nur 1 mal eine kleine Auseinandersetzung gehabt, allerdings habe ich damals auch einem Deutsche Bahn Beamten die Kamera direkt ins Gesicht gehalten, und hatte dann auch länger Augenktontakt mit ihm bzw bin neben ihm stehem geblieben.
Er wollte dass ich das Foto lösche, sonst würde er zur Polizei.
Da es auf Film war, habe ich ihm die Rolle gegeben. (Würde ich nie wieder tun, und solltest du auch nicht)
Man kann auch je nach Situation die Leute ansprechen ohne dass das Bild danach gestellt aussieht.
Hallo Michael, oha - das klingt nach einer heftigen Situation - wahrscheinlich hättest du es rein rechtlich nicht gemusst, aber ich denke ich hätte in so einer Situation auch deeskalierend reagiert - gab ja keine Möglichkeit sich der Situation zu entziehen im Zug...Ja, stellen funktioniert teilweise, das stimmt@@michelwunderlich4861
@@streetphotographyguyes war tatsächlich am Bahnhof in Frankfurt und nicht IM Zug
Die Rolle hatte aber sowieso erst 6 oder 7 aufnahmen und die Polizei stand da auch schon vor Ort.
(Ich glaube da steht immer Polizei, aus Sicherheitsgründen)
Habe mich versucht zu erklären was ich mache und hab versucht das logisch rüber zu bringen aber er wollte nicht.
Ich habe aber daraus gelernt ;)
Danke für dein Video.
Einfach respektieren das man nicht fotografiert werden möchte? Wäre auch eine Option
Most of my shots are taken from my chest with my thumb, just casually holding my camera with my eyes looking the other way or looking down at the flip screen.
I do similar. Mostly my thumb or a finger already resting on the shutter release, just increasing pressure to take the photo.
You should include your portfolio in the description, so would be easy to check how seriously to take your advices. Now i cant see even your name so i could google your work.
Hi! Links to my Instagram, Twitter and to my 2 websites are on my channel page - but you are right - i should put it in the description as well, thanks for the tip!
True story/pro-tip: People tend to ignore you if you’re carrying groceries. Voila! Hidden in plain sight.
Hi Kevin! That is a great tip!!! Appreciate it, cheers mate!
Ur genius 😎
Not really...but thank you😊
meanwhile i put plushies on my camera
.oODid Garry Winogrand wear a black trenchcoat?
I use a wide angle lens which captures more than the subject but that can be cropped later. With a wide angle lens you can take a photo of a subject when they are almost past you and they would never know. Another thing I do is to take a picture of a subject and once I lower the camera from my face I look past the subject as if looking at what I had photographed. The subject tends to think I shot the photo of something behind them.
tip 4 isent rele posebol for me wen im using old charmeras betwin 1930s and 80s. youe cant record videos on them... :D
Sorry as these are tips for beginners, as I ignore most of them and just point and shoot!
I just do it as quick and as fast as possible and keep walking!
ITS A 187 ON A UNDERCOVER COP =)))))) ,
'InconspiKuous' not 'sh'.
Thanks! This word is so hard for me🙄😬😁
@@streetphotographyguy you could have used synonyms such as "unnoticeable" "concealed" etc... In case you hesitate with pronunciation just google the word, there is a phonetic transcription right below the word plus a button to hear it pronounced correctly, hope this helps! Greats tips btw, this doesn't affect the quality of the content
Not too bad a selection of tips. I just can't get over how you mispronounce conspicuous. There are two u's and four syllables - makes a difference.
You are right Stewart. Sorry for that.
@streetphotographyguy Loved your video! Excellent advice. I understood you perfectly. Thank you so much for sharing. If and when I do street photography, I will try using a Rolleiflex. Somehow, raising a camera to eye level seems intrusive to many people. I liked your comment about starting a conversation with your subject. That's important in many circumstances.
6 foot 125 KG bearded arab in a western country is a great formula to be invisible, not
😅True! Who are you talking about?