Finding this channel is like finding oasis among hundreds of so called street photographer nowadays (which most of them only shot what happened on the street rather than making art out of it).
3:07 I had the same thought! People watching is so fascinating and brings to mind so many possibilities in creating narratives. Love this tutorial and demo. Beautiful work and articulated in a gentle and passionate way.
Rupert, I just stumbled upon your channel. Great work indeed. It's refreshing to watch an experienced street shooter conveying helpful and logical advice as opposed to the other youtubers who just seem to waffle on with valueless information and narcissistic dribble. Thank you.
These videos have become my go to for advice on improving my street photography. I also love the way you work with people within the urban environment giving weight to both.
I've always loved photography and believe it too be another form of expressive artform just like music, a painting, a sculpture etc It's another way to communicate with the world in our own point of view. Love your channel and i find it refreshing and knowledge packed as opposed to the self aggrandizing of oneself with their latest gizmos and gadgets that has sadly inundate UA-cam of late. Thank you for making your videos. I'm learning tonnes..... From Malaysia...
Rupert, what a fantastic channel. I'm not sure why I haven't found your videos sooner. I have been desperate to find a good fine art specific street photography channel for a long time. Your work is stunning, and I can't wait to see the next one. There's a lot of great info to be found in each video. I can't wait to start putting some into practice once I make up my mind on whether to swap out my chunky DSLR for an olympus em5 mk ii or fuji xt1. Amazing content, this channel will no doubt sky rocket in no time at all.
I recently bought a (used) OM-D E-M1x. It has GPS, pretty important for documenting where the camera was, and live ND because I want to play with motion blur and ICM. It's not small though.
Your videos are most helpful to me - thank you. But, being new to street photography, how do I avoid the clichés in this genre? Or, perhaps it doesn’t matter if I like the photo.
I don't live in London, or even in the UK. My nearest city has limited architecture. I search and search, but I cannot find shadows anything like the ones in your photos.
You can make your own photos. It’s okay If your city has limited architecture. Just create with whatever your city has. Because I also come from a city that has bad architectures, and I train my vision to be more selective to see a scene.
I agree with Aldila. Shoot during peak shadow hours and get some low angles to elongate. High contrast. Experiment and be creative. Even if you have to set up your own temporary settings! Have fun!
@@rupertvandervell OK, thank you. I just wondered if shooting in colour made it more difficult to envisage the effect, for instance, of the light and shadows and so on. Cheers.
@@M123OCT For me, yes. A single colour tone out of place can distract enough to spoil the mood and lessen the impact of the image. It's difficult to choose the colours in your street scenes, by and large you have to go with what's present.
@@M123OCT For me, no. Colour is a distraction. I shoot colour, and I have enough experience and practice to have a good idea of what I can get, and if I don't know, I shoot anyway.
Really enjoying your work and just bought a copy of your book ! ( despite my loathing of ''film presets '' ) I do however reserve the right to be a hypocrite and buy a digital camera and start using presets one day
Finding this channel is like finding oasis among hundreds of so called street photographer nowadays (which most of them only shot what happened on the street rather than making art out of it).
Your photos are beautifully composed. Reminds me of Fan Ho.
Thank you for this :)
Love it! Another perfect amount of information to time ratio.
Exactly. I was about to comment that photography tips in under 7 minutes is a niche that seems rare on UA-cam, but a massively valuable one.
Again, a great and informative video, thank you!
Thank you Rupert, at 4:04 you give the sort of advice I’de been sort of waiting for many years.
Another great and inspirational presentation. Love your eye and strong images. A pleasure to view.
You have the mind of an artist above all !!!! Thanks !!! subscribed !!!
Excellent tutorial on balanced compositions! Always looking forward to your next video!
your work is unreal
It's just amazing! I am impressed!
Got the book. Arriving from UK on 10th. Looking forward to it. Great video as always.
3:07 I had the same thought! People watching is so fascinating and brings to mind so many possibilities in creating narratives. Love this tutorial and demo. Beautiful work and articulated in a gentle and passionate way.
Great channel sir! Keep up the great work!
You are so talented!! This was very helpful thank you!
Another excellent video with very helpful examples of how you composed your images. Thanks for making the video (and sharing it).
Rupert, I just stumbled upon your channel. Great work indeed. It's refreshing to watch an experienced street shooter conveying helpful and logical advice as opposed to the other youtubers who just seem to waffle on with valueless information and narcissistic dribble. Thank you.
Great video and examples! Very helpful.
Really informative and well put together videos Rupert. Your work is also fantastic!
You are a photography composition genius
awesome! The photos example are really great. thank you
Useful information, thank you.
These videos have become my go to for advice on improving my street photography. I also love the way you work with people within the urban environment giving weight to both.
Enjoying your videos very much indeed. Can you please tell us about the music you use? In this and other videos, the music is wonderfully atmospheric.
UA-cam audio library.
I've always loved photography and believe it too be another form of expressive artform just like music, a painting, a sculpture etc
It's another way to communicate with the world in our own point of view.
Love your channel and i find it refreshing and knowledge packed as opposed to the self aggrandizing of oneself with their latest gizmos and gadgets that has sadly inundate UA-cam of late.
Thank you for making your videos. I'm learning tonnes..... From Malaysia...
Thank you, appreciate the feedback.
Excelent compozitions ,thank you for sharing ,and thank you for the tips ,keep up the good work.
Wonderful explanation. Loved it. Thank you so much. 🥰😇🤩🙏🏼🙌🏼🤗👍🏼😊👌🏼👏🏼👏🏼💐
Thankyou for this tutorial. Awesome!
Great work. Just found tour channel. You're such a good photographer. Thanks for sharing.
Very nice video. Thanks for sharing
Amazing Work!!!
More excellent content Rupert. I really look forward to these and just want to say how much I am enjoying your book - it really is very good.
Thanks Greg, much appreciated!
Rupert, what a fantastic channel. I'm not sure why I haven't found your videos sooner. I have been desperate to find a good fine art specific street photography channel for a long time.
Your work is stunning, and I can't wait to see the next one. There's a lot of great info to be found in each video. I can't wait to start putting some into practice once I make up my mind on whether to swap out my chunky DSLR for an olympus em5 mk ii or fuji xt1.
Amazing content, this channel will no doubt sky rocket in no time at all.
Thanks Andy! Thumbs-up for the Olympus, majority of my images come via one.
@streetviewer Great stuff, i have been leaning more toward the Olympus so looks like that will be the choice.
I recently bought a (used) OM-D E-M1x. It has GPS, pretty important for documenting where the camera was, and live ND because I want to play with motion blur and ICM. It's not small though.
Modern classics, as good as any renowned photog.
Especially in this day of C-phone camera's.
Great tips
thank you so much
Just beautiful images, puts me to shame … but inspires me to be better
Your videos are most helpful to me - thank you. But, being new to street photography, how do I avoid the clichés in this genre? Or, perhaps it doesn’t matter if I like the photo.
I don't live in London, or even in the UK. My nearest city has limited architecture. I search and search, but I cannot find shadows anything like the ones in your photos.
You can make your own photos.
It’s okay If your city has limited architecture. Just create with whatever your city has.
Because I also come from a city that has bad architectures, and I train my vision to be more selective to see a scene.
I agree with Aldila. Shoot during peak shadow hours and get some low angles to elongate. High contrast. Experiment and be creative. Even if you have to set up your own temporary settings! Have fun!
Rupert, do you shoot in colour and change in post, or do you shoot in black and white?
I shoot in colour with digital, always worth having a colour version too.
@@rupertvandervell OK, thank you. I just wondered if shooting in colour made it more difficult to envisage the effect, for instance, of the light and shadows and so on. Cheers.
@@M123OCT For me, yes. A single colour tone out of place can distract enough to spoil the mood and lessen the impact of the image. It's difficult to choose the colours in your street scenes, by and large you have to go with what's present.
@@M123OCT For me, no. Colour is a distraction. I shoot colour, and I have enough experience and practice to have a good idea of what I can get, and if I don't know, I shoot anyway.
Really enjoying your work and just bought a copy of your book ! ( despite my loathing of ''film presets '' ) I do however reserve the right to be a hypocrite and buy a digital camera and start using presets one day
Really enjoying your videos and images. Very inspirational for me thank you.
"no we have david gilmour at home"
Great insights thank you Rupert - like and sub from me :-)