Street Portrait Photography How To Make Stunning Street Portraits (Street Photography Book 1) (PDFDrive)
Street Portrait Photography How To Make Stunning Street Portraits (Street Photography Book 1) (PDFDrive)
Portrait Photography
How to make stunning street portraits
Copyright © 2019 Priya Ranjan
All rights reserved.
Dedicated to
my wife Reena
and my son Tarun
without your support
I won’t have learnt photography
Leave aside writing a book on photography!
Contents
Introduction
1. Seek to understand first
2. Prefer techniques over tools
3. Make a composition
4. Let there be light
5. Get a camera, any camera
6. Prefer quality over quantity
7. Showcase your artwork
8. Embrace the photography life
9. Bonus Chapter – How to Interview
Final words…
About the Author
Introduction
What makes you comfortable can ruin you, what makes you
uncomfortable is the only way to grow.
– Bill Eckstrom
If you've understood this, you can drop this book now, save time,
and hit the streets with your camera. If you need to make this concept
more profound, then bear with me. This is a very crisp book to help
you with vital concepts without meandering.
Photograph 2: The enthusiastic cadet ready for the parade.
People relate to people. They want to know and learn from what
other people are doing. Photography helps make this process easier. It
connects civilizations of one part of the world to the other part of the
world. Embrace this responsibility.
Streets are so vivid that there is no dearth of subjects. It's your job,
as a photographer, to document this life and share with other parts of
the globe.
Each book and video taught me some lessons that I could go out
and apply. That's how the wisdom is growing. That's the way I learnt
to grow. Knowledge and wisdom I acquired in the journey range from
making photos to sharing with the larger audience. I learnt working
with a huge sense of responsibility while delivering creativity.
Photograph 7: Saree is still in fashion. Isn't it?
By the end of this book, you will see all strangers differently.
There are unseen faces, untold stories — let's take this responsibility to
bring these to everyone.
Alright, turn the pages to understand how you can take brilliant
street portraits with ease.
Photograph 9: "Am I not a beauty queen!"
1. Seek to understand first
Thoughts without content are empty, intuitions without concepts are
blind.
– Immanuel Kant
Where can you spot friendly people, who would readily agree to
having their photo taken?
Public events
Photograph 1.1: The decisive moment when she noticed me pressing the shutter button.
Will just any photo serve the purpose? No. You need an amazing
portrait for the people to pay attention and appreciate it. People
appreciate good photos, so don't capture sub-standard photos. Hone
your skills to produce captivating photos consistently.
The photo must be taken at the ghat (river banks where prayers are
offered), with the right surrounding, right attire, and right festive
mood. You can’t orchestrate such photos and you can’t fake the mood
in the studio.
A person is more likely to let you shoot his photo at events rather
than walking solo in the streets. It doesn’t mean you can ask a solo
person in the street for phot – stay tuned, I’ll address this soon.
City streets
To shoot local people, walk in the street. Spot and engage with the
locals and take their pictures. In the next chapter, I'll guide you on how
to handle people’s behavior to get the best out of them.
Photograph 1.3: Happy school girl.
Rural locations
Above picture was taken in the rural area of Saigon. The old lady
was extremely happy after looking at her photo. She said, "I never
thought I looked so stunning."
Capture the real "real life," not the orchestrated, real-looking life.
If the story calls for it, keep the background in focus along with the
subject or make the background completely blurred to make the image
pop out of the screen or print. Blurring the background depends on the
camera capability — it's a good strategy to focus completely on the
person if the background is noisy or not part of the narrative.
Hitting the streets with a camera and asking random people to pose can be
stressful. Arm yourself with the techniques to approach the right people at
the right place and at the right time.
Engaging with strangers for good street portraits pushes you out of
your comfort zone; it also pushes the people being shot out of their
comfort zone too. I'll guide you on how to make the stranger
comfortable, build trust, and make the engagement warm for both of
you.
Second, I need to know more about the person and engage with him in an
interview. It paves my way to know new people and uncover unique stories. I
take responsibility to spread those stories.
In the case of candid portraits, you don't direct the person – you place
yourself at an angle so that you frame the best shot. You may need to wait for
the right action to start if you've visualized the photo in a certain manner.
Photograph 2.4: The face is lit by the matchstick light.
First, I don't want to disturb the person who is busy with their work. For
example, a shopkeeper won't want to pose if he's in the middle of transactions
with customers.
In either case, posed or candid, the person knows that I'm taking
his photo.
The decisive moment will come and go. You need to act quickly or
else you will miss an iconic portrait.
I'm telling you all this not to put extra pressure on your shoulders. I
want you to stay abreast and push the idea to secondary memory. The
mind has huge a capability to process lots of information in real time.
With awareness and knowledge, I want you to enable your mind with
additional parameters to make you a professional street portrait
photographer.
Photograph 2.6: A handicraft artist in the International Crafts Fair.
1. Appreciate honestly: Tell the person what you liked about them,
honestly and candidly. At times, even a smile or subtle body language
help them understand that you are genuinely interested in them.
2. Behave like a pro: A professional’s body language doesn't come by
faking. A lot goes behind the scenes for you to appear and sound like a
pro street photographer or a photojournalist. Keep shooting whatever
comes your way in the street – shooting even walls, doors, buildings
and objects in the street will aid you lots of confidence. The
confidence reflects even before you start talking to a person in the
street.
3. Define the purpose: You must be clear in your mind about why you
want people to pose for you. It could be regarding documenting city
life, making your own portfolio, or working on a special assignment. If
asked, share the purpose with the person.
4. Stay ready to answer any queries or concerns: People may ask you
not to shoot. They may ask you why you're shooting them. They may
ask you to share pictures. They may ask about your background. They
may raise privacy concerns. In case of any conflicts, stay calm and
address the concern amicably. I had many such experiences where the
person told me not to shoot them, but eventually they agreed and asked
me to send them the photos. Once they see good-quality photos, they
also feel good about it.
5. Show them what you captured: If they're relatively free, you can
show them the amazing photo you took. I have experienced that they
feel great about it because they have never looked at themselves in the
way you captured them in the picture.
6. Buy more time: If you find it worth spending more time and the
person also agrees, you can spend more time engaging with the person.
A good photographer is a good storyteller too. You need these stories
to come out in society. A good photo with a complementing story
make it a great package.
7. Stay sensitive about the situation: If the person is very busy, don't
disturb them to pose. If it is a funeral, asking them to smile or
appreciating any of the person's attributes is not a good idea. If people
are jovial and playful, don't ask them to give a serious look. Stay
sensitive about the situation. The person is on the street for a purpose.
Don't drag them away from what they're doing. If you distract them
heavily, you will invite trouble and make a worthless photo.
Shooting kids needs extra care – get permission from the kid’s
parents, guardian, or the teacher before you shoot them. Minors can’t
apply their judgement. An ethical photographer won’t want to put the
kid in any dilemma or danger by taking non-consensual photos.
Photograph 2.7: "It's very hot sunny day today. I borrowed my fathers sunglasses."
To sum up the chapter, a good technique of shooting street
portraits is to spot the right person and to pose him or not based on
your story. Stay abreast of situations to handle any concerns.
The technique will not only make you a professional photographer but
will also make you feel safe, ethical, and responsible.
On that note, let’s understand how you can make your images
stand out with the help of right composition. Hop on to the next
chapter.
Photograph 2.8: Smile is contagious. Try this technique with any stranger.
3. Make a composition
Learn the rules like a pro, so you can break them like an artist.
– Pablo Picasso
Street portraits are impromptu and on the spot. You can't control the
surrounding. You can't procure props instantly. You have a challenge to
isolate the subject. You can't ask a person to follow you to a different
location. Whatever the natural ambience offers you, you're bound to work
with it.
No.
While you play under limited choices to compose and structure your
frame, don't place a person randomly. Let each item and negative space add
value to the narrative.
This structured approach for the story through the photo is called
composition.
Cramming and recalling every rule is not possible when you pose the
subject and look into the camera viewfinder. Editing provides you a second
opportunity to adhere to the composition rules.
Here we go with the standard rules... Stay aware and break them at your
convenience:
Fill the frame
Photograph 3.2: Indian girl in traditional Saree and jewelery.
“If your photographs aren't good enough, you're not close enough," said
Robert Capa, the greatest war photographer.
Rule of thirds
Photograph 3.3: Stopped the gentleman "cyclist" on a highway for the photo. We enjoyed
chatting after the photos.
2. Place the subject’s eyes or a significantly focused item on one of the
intersections of the lines.
It's difficult to get this perfect when shooting. You can crop it during
post-processing to stay closest to the rule of thirds.
Frame within frame
Photograph 3.4: There is nothing as powerful as mother's love, and nothing as healing as a
child's soul.
Leading lines
Photograph 3.5: Snake "Python" charmer!
1. Nose pointing in the same direction where the subject’s eyes point to.
2. Provide enough space in the photo in the right or left side of your
frame, based on whether the subject is looking right or left.
3. If there are two people, they're looking at each other or in the same
direction.
Cropping
Photograph 3.7: All I see is blue!
You may find it difficult to spot the exact composition rules being
captured in your photo. Cropping helps you with two things:
2. Accentuate the composition effect by making it look prominent.
I am an artist. I don't get held down by the rules and the constraints. I
pick each composition opportunity based on its merit, not to make the photo
technically good but to make it artistically appealing. I suggest you also
leverage rules to your advantage and not become a captive of the
boundaries.
Shooting provides you with the first opportunity to frame the perfectly
composed photo. If you can't follow it during the shoot, editing is your next
opportunity. Almost every photo improves after editing, provided you don't
overdo the editing. Don't hesitate to learn and apply editing.
With light, you need to care about direction and quality. Direction of
light will set the right mood, shape, and depth of the subject. Quality of
light would help you with right exposure, white balance, and saturation of
the image. The choice of "right" depends on your artistic visualization of
the photograph. A "right" for one photographer may be "wrong" for the
other. But whatever "right" definition of mood, exposure, saturation, depth,
shape, etc. you have in mind, you need to care about the DQ (Direction &
Quality) of the light.
Source of Light
Whether you place your subject opposite to the source of the light or in
the direction of the light, you need to first identity what the source of light
is. There is one main source which generates the light, then there are other
surfaces which reflect the light.
Photograph 4.2: "I'll become film star someday."
For example, if you're standing outdoors during the day, the sun is your
main source of light. Walls, roads, floors, etc. reflect the same sunlight to
various directions, depending on the inclination (vertical, horizontal, tilted)
of the reflecting surface.
The light is soft or harsh also depending on the relative size between the
light source and the subject. In the last photo, the source of harsh light is the
sun, which is relatively small in comparison to the wall from where the
reflected light is coming in the shade. Well, technically the sun is much
bigger, but it’s about the relative size from the reference of the subject.
Whether you want soft light or harsh light, you can decide based on the
narrative of the portrait. If you're showing a hardworking laborer, harsh
sunlight will contribute positively. If you're showing an urban woman on
the street, soft light will portray the elegance.
The face looks broader if broad lighting is used. The face looks slimmer
if the short light is used. For a woman or girl, the short light technique
works well. Because it gives a thin-face look. For men, the broad light gives
a masculine look.
The natural source of light is the one which you're not in control of.
Sunlight, an overcast day, sunlight reflections from roads and walls,
artificial lights in events — these are natural light sources. It is also called
ambient light.
At times, the natural lights are good enough. Other times, you may need
to add basic lighting equipment to achieve stunning portraits.
For street photography, I don't think you need a costly set-up of strobes,
stands, batteries, scrim, and other stuff which you typically use in a studio
or outdoor fashion shoots.
Ninety percent of the time I used natural lights and played with the
sunlight and shades by placing the subject appropriately.
I was a natural light photographer for one good year. I took photos of
nature, birds, people, and buildings without adding any additional lights.
When there was lack of proper light, I used to play with the ISO (because I
needed the aperture for sharpness and shutter speed to avoid motion blur).
The light source that you create can be used as the main light to light
your subject. For example, a flash gun used in a wedding. Alternatively,
you can use the created light source to fill in for the shadow portion of the
subject.
Additional lights can also be used as rim light of the subject if it is fired
on the subject from behind. A rim light on the subject helps separate it from
the background and results in a flattering image.
Light Modifiers
Photograph 4.7: At Thailand airport during transit. My camera keeps me busy wherever I go.
A reflector can bounce the light back on the subject. Mostly reflectors
are applied on the opposite side of the main light source to fill some light in
the shadow area. It also helps provide light to the areas on the neck and
below the nose and eyes. It brightens the catchlight in the eyes.
A scrim is typically used to protect the subject from the harsh sunlight
by covering it overhead of the subject. Scrim filters and distributes the light
evenly on the subject, providing a soft light.
Third things third, don't mind raising the ISO in the camera if there is
no other way to create additional light. Noise in a photo is acceptable or can
be fixed in editing, but the blur and exposure are best handled in a camera.
A low shutter speed provides you more exposure, but can cause motion
blur for fast-moving subjects.
A high ISO provides you more exposure, but a high ISO in good
lighting conditions can cause the image to be overexposed. Also, a high
ISO in low light conditions can result in a noisy and grainy image.
I prefer shooting in low ISO (as low as possible). Try modifying light
by adding more sources of light with the help of a flash or reflector. Set an
optimum aperture and shutter speed setting before thinking of raising the
ISO.
This should be the shortest chapter of the book. The reason is because you
can produce stunning portraits with a lot of available cameras, lenses, and
their accessories. Any of them. I'm on a budget. Hence, I will share my
experience with budget photography.
Photograph 5.1: Yes, photographers are part of my street stories!
The Nikon D3200 is the only gear I had till the last couple of months. It
is one of the most inexpensive gear in the market. I thought that I could do
better if I upgraded my DSLR. But I kept exploring streets more than the
gadgets – I never felt that my gear was not supporting me in getting what I
wanted.
Ninety percent of the photos in this book are shot on a Nikon D3200,
and the rest are on a Nikon D750. I changed the gear only after an
unfortunate breakage of my old DSLR.
DSLR has an additional advantage that you can mount a wide range of
lenses on the camera, based on the genre of photography and locations. A
wide-angle lens can be used in smaller rooms, a prime lens can be used for
portraits, and a telephoto lens is used for distant subjects.
For street portraits, I almost always use 50mm prime lens on my Nikon
gear. As I said, it's not about how costly your camera is because you can get
stunning photographs with a budget DSLR too. Adhering to this principal, I
use a Nikon D3200 for my photography.
Carrying a DSLR is difficult and people prefer to pick this camera only
on certain occasions or for certain purposes. I suggest that you take the
camera wherever you go. Buy a backpack where you can keep the camera
along with your laptop. My camera accompanies me in my car and
wherever I go.
Photograph 5.3: After party, still in party!
Camera settings for varying light conditions would vary. Before you
look into the viewfinder to spot the right exposure, set the closest possible
shutter, ISO, and aperture in the given light conditions. It comes with
experience; you can achieve it soon if you start practicing shouldering your
DSLR everywhere you go.
I don't prescribe any brand. You can buy a camera of any brand: Nikon,
Canon, Sony, or others. While choosing a camera, keep in mind that lenses
are replaceable for the same brand only. If you already possess lenses of a
certain brand, buy the same brand's camera too. You can look for borrowing
or renting opportunities of lenses also, because buying every lens would dig
deep into your pockets.
To sum up, buy any camera of your choice, carry it with you, and
acquaint yourself with the exposure setting. Spend less time meddling with
the camera. Spend more time exploring streets and people.
Good going so far! Flip the page to learn how to make your photo into a
breathtaking image.
Photograph 5.4: If I spot you again on the streets, I can't not take your photo, sir.
6. Prefer quality over quantity
Quality is never an accident.
– John Ruskin
Shoot many. Delete most. Edit few. Share the best ones. That’s the
workflow I follow for my photo editing. You don’t shoot photos only in the
camera, you also make them in the laptop or photo editing software.
What you see is not what your camera gets perfectly. Myriad light
conditions, noisy backgrounds, wrong framing, and aberrant white balance
cause imperfections, which you can correct with editing.
Don’t make contrast too high or too low. If you get the desired results
with the subtle exposure changes then accept the image, else reject it and
move on to the next photo.
3. Clean photo
Remove noise or dust or unwanted objects that would distract viewers
from the photo. Well, there is no extent to what you can do cleaning the
photo. You should leave it where you exhaust your energy or the photo
looks acceptable.
4. Reject a few photos
In the technique chapter I suggested you take multiple photos of a
person. During review, you can identify which one is the best for you to in
terms of expression, exposure, and sharpness. Reject the ones which don't
meet your criteria of good photos.
5. Uniqueness
Your photos become your identity over a period of time. A professional
photographer develops a unique style. That style comes not only with
shooting, but also from editing. Your composition, saturation, eye for
detail, and subject’s expressions make your photo unique.
Photograph 6.2: Tribal woman in her traditional dress.
2. Pick the one which has the best expression and sharpness; white
balance and saturation can be edited. I can't bring back the expression and
sharpness. So, I pick the one which has the best story, not necessarily the
best exposure.
5. Set the right exposure and white balance. I shoot in Raw. So, Camera
Raw filter in Photoshop enable me with lots of options to improve my
photo's brightness, contrast etc. I typically option this to make look as i saw
the person in the natural position and the light conditions.
6. Name the image in a way so that you are able to search with right
filtering. I typically rename my edited image with "editOtherAttributes".
7. Crop and recompose the image. At times, you may need to crop the
image differently to share in various media. For example, if you've to share
the image in Instagram, which has 1:1 grid size, you would need to
recompose the image and crop yourself rather than allowing Instagram to
crop it randomly. Similarly, you may choose to recompose on various
media, if your original file size is not acceptable.
Photograph 6.3: The face reveals the experience you go through. Faces never lie!
I. If you don't want large files, you can set it up to export lower quality.
For web, you won't need full resolution. For prints, you need the highest
possible resolution.
II. Name the files based on the theme or city or person’s name.
Photograph 6.4: Winter early morning blues!
To sum up, don't worry much about camera settings while shooting
because you have another opportunity in post-processing. Hone the editing
skills to produce quality portraits, both technically as well as artistically.
So far, you’ve made a great portrait. Won’t you like the whole world
appreciate the photograph? Read on…
Photograph 6.5: "Wait, let me adjust my cap!"
7. Showcase your artwork
If you’re always trying to be normal, you will never know how amazing
you can be.
– Maya Angelou
When I was a kid, I used to run to my parents with any new drawing that I
used to create. Let that kid of showing your art to the world stay alive in
you. Take pride in your creations. Show the world what you believe it
should look like. Your own unique perspective. Your own unique style.
Your art!
Photograph 7.1: "Ageing cannot be an excuse for not working. At 81, I work on par with my
next generation."
3. Spread your unique perspective of the art. Not sure whether there is
any uniqueness in your photography? Keep sharing anyway... you'll
discover soon yourself.
If you hide your photos in caves, chances are no one will notice
your work, including yourself, and you will stop working on
photography eventually.
Digital mode
1. Instagram
Photograph: 7.2: "Chill bro!"
Instagram is one of the major platforms for photography enthusiasts
and professionals. 800 million users on Instagram are dying to see
your photos.
1. Write a good caption or behind the scenes story for the photo.
2. Use hashtags wisely. Don't waste unrelated or unnecessary hashtags —
keep it specific and smart. The limitation is 30 hashtags. Spend them
wisely. Read my article (hyperlink) for better understanding on
hashtags for photographers.
3. Tag Influencers and Photography handles who can feature your work
for wider reach.
I prefer Instagram (@i.ranjan) over any other social media because
people are here to share and follow photography.
2. Facebook
Photograph 7.3: "You're right. Those are real permanent tattos!"
You can either create a page and invite your friends or share your
photos on your personal wall. While Facebook is mainly for personal
connections, sharing photography is not a bad idea on the page.
There are many more social sites like Flickr, etc. Select a couple of
them wisely, because staying active on every site is humanly not
possible and it becomes counterproductive after some time.
Offline mode
Photograph 7.5: Happy tourists at a Truck Foods Festival.
1. Photo book: I've created a photo book and keep it at my home for
visitors to see and appreciate! You can keep the coffee table book at
your home or office or give one away to your friends. If you're
pursuing photography professionally, drop a few copies to your
prospective clients or partners too.
2. Share the prints: Create and share the prints of street portraits to the
person you shoot. Well, this may not be possible if you took the
pictures while travelling. But if you repeat the travels or you're
shooting in your own city, you can thank those people by giving away
the printed copies of the photographs.
Photograph 7.6: One of my early street portraits.
I took above photograph long back, when I was learning
photography. Personally, I super-liked the photo and subtle expression
of the person. He just noticed that I was taking his picture and there is
a little bit of delay in his response.
I was hesitant to share this photo with people and social media,
because I thought I captured this by fluke and I can't repeat such
photos. I wasn't even sure how I got the manual setting correct for the
exposure and sharpness. I thought, I will share this, if I'm able to
repeat it.
After gaining lots of confidence, photo after photo, I've now shared
it and have received the best remarks on the photo. This remains one
of my favorite street portraits.
4. Don't spam people's wall and pages on social media by flooding them
with your artwork.
6. You can write blogs or captions on the behind the scenes stories.
Beginners can gain knowledge on handling people and you can add a
creative dimension to your storytelling.
Sharing is caring — not only for the community but also for your
own creative pursuits. This book is my attempt in the direction of
sharing and gaining wider reach through Kindle media.
4. You know the editing workflow and create your own style of finished
photos.
5. You learn to handle fans and followers with whom you've shared
photos. You also know how to approach social media and, among so
many websites, which ones to focus on.
6. You gain professional discipline and patience required for the artist.
7. You learn lots of soft skills while dealing with people, like ethics,
integrity, and moral values.
9. What else? You know which gear and lens works best in what
conditions. The beginner's confusion about the lens and the gear will
disappear.
themes, mood, and end result — the way you want it or your client
wants it.
Photograph 8.3: Don't judge me by the grey hair. i'm a young artist.
If you want to stay with the art of street photography or travel
photography or diverse human portraits, here are few of the options
you can explore:
2. Coffee table book: a coffee table book would help people navigate the
way you want to show a theme or mood. For example, you can show
all the monuments in your city in a coffee table book. ‘Humans of
New York’ is a wonderful example. People belonging to multiple
countries and ethnicities are covered in the book — together they
make the planet Earth.
Street photographers have a definite passion for humanity. Once you ace the
street photography, you'll love to extend it to understand regional people and
their society — share each story with the larger audience. This endeavor is called
documentary or photojournalism.
Photograph 9.1: American "Krishna" ISKCON devotee.
You need basic writing skill, curiosity, and passion for knowledge sharing
about humans.
"Excuse me, sir, can I ask you a few questions?" asked a kid who was there
with two other kids with pen and paper.
"Sure," I said.
"India."
"Oh, wow! I know this country" one kid told his friend. Then he looked at
me and added, "My mom likes the Bollywood movies and dance."
The cute little guy surprised me with his knowledge and wanted to know
even more about my country.
He further asked questions from the printed piece of paper, "How many
seasons do you have in your country, sir?"
I said, "Four."
I said, "I love people like you in your country, my dear friend. You've lovely
and happy people in the country." I showed them my camera and said, "I met
many people in Saigon and took their photos."
I showed them the photos and they enjoyed it thoroughly. They got back to
the questions.
"Very good photos, sir. Thank you for your response." Looking at the sheet,
the other guy asked me, "Did you come here for vacation or work?"
I said, "I came here for work, but I like to travel and meet local people in the
cities where I go even for the work."
Then they asked a question which was not in their sheet, "How many times
have you visited here?"
He told me, "I also like to take photos on mobile. But your camera is good.
The photos are also good. How can I learn to take photos, sir?"
I said, "You can learn on your own; keep shooting with mobile till you feel
like having a DSLR. You can buy a book and learn to operate the camera.
Continue to practice photography with your mobile camera."
They thanked me and moved on to the next tourist.
Photograph 9.2: The kid who interviewed me.
Like these kids, people are curious to know about people from different parts
of the sphere. They can't reach out to everyone. So whichever part of world you
visit or belong to, document about it through interviews.
Photograph 9.3: "Sorry, I can't stop to talk. I've lots of work pending."
Interviewing people will help break the jinx with strangers. While talking to
people, push yourself extra for enriching engagement. The more you interview
the more you feel the urge to meet new strangers.
There you go with the tools and techniques to shoot stunning street portraits. If
you’re serious about the street photography and photojournalism, keep a camera
with you, wherever you go.
I wish you the best of luck and lots of fun with your photography endeavors!
Don’t forget to share the goodness and care for the community.
I’m dying to hear from you whether this crisp book is of any use to you.
Take you few seconds out to write the review on Amazon and let other people
know if this is helpful!!
Photograph 10: Did you like all the portraits in the book? Drop a review/
comment/ suggestions.
About the Author
Priya Ranjan is an Engineering Graduate from the prestigious Indian
Institute of Technology, India. He works for the world's largest Foods and
Beverages corporation.