tlitody
Well-known
I'm curious whether people who live in cities tend to do mostly street photogrpahy because that's what they see every day and if people who live in the country tend to photograph landscapes because that's what they see everyday.
FPjohn
Well-known
Town and Country
Town and Country
State Street in Madison, Falls & Gorge in Grand Falls.
Yours
FPJ
Town and Country
State Street in Madison, Falls & Gorge in Grand Falls.
Yours
FPJ
coelacanth
Ride, dive, shoot.
I live right in the middle of San Francisco (literally center of the SF map) and commute to the office in financial district / SOMA through downtown with my camera so my film binders are mostly filled with city street shots.
rodgersfoto
Established
Live in small city in Indiana. Photograph here and elsewhere in small cities in the Midwest. check out http://rodgersphoto.blogspot.com/
Ranger Copy
One Stop Short
You are most likely on the mark theoretically.
I live in the city and the summer heat restricts most of my shooting to my yards. Although I tend to shoot objects/structures. I haven't found my niche and even if I had one, I would hope to experience others. with the exception of commercial/commissioned work. I don't think I would enjoy that. Same with cameras I'm trying everything eventually - at least that's the plan.
I live in the city and the summer heat restricts most of my shooting to my yards. Although I tend to shoot objects/structures. I haven't found my niche and even if I had one, I would hope to experience others. with the exception of commercial/commissioned work. I don't think I would enjoy that. Same with cameras I'm trying everything eventually - at least that's the plan.
paulfish4570
Veteran
Pure country unless I'm traveling ...
andredossantos
Well-known
I live in NYC and I photograph people, still lives, landscapes--all out on the streets and scenes I happen across on the streets. I don't think I do one type of photography (people vs no people) more or less--just depends on the day.
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CorreCaminos
CorreCaminos
Live in small city in Indiana. Photograph here and elsewhere in small cities in the Midwest. check out http://rodgersphoto.blogspot.com/
rodersfoto,
Great photos. I love the grain elevators and the "along the tracks" series. I live in a (technically, near a) small town and I spend a lot of time driving thru towns similar to the ones you photographed. I'm constantly complaining about how boring, photographically speaking, they are but you have proved me wrong; I just need to look harder.
lacavol
Established
Live and work in Hollyweed, or so the sign once said. But I love the mountains and especially the desert. I need to branch out to the sea soon. It's the heat and smog season now, and they burnt my favorite forest down.
mfogiel
Veteran
Live in a small city on the sea. So I shoot the street but also some seascapes, or something in the middle...

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Roger Hicks
Veteran
Small village of under 1000 inhabitants -- about 1200 in the whole commune (this and associated villages/hamlets). But I travel a lot.
Cheers,
R.
Cheers,
R.
Michael Markey
Veteran
Outer suburbs/country in a holiday/ yachting /horse area.
Shoot in surrounding villages and `cause I`m involved in the local equestrian scene I shoot horses too
Street is restricted to meets in Manchester with the RFF crowd.
Shoot in surrounding villages and `cause I`m involved in the local equestrian scene I shoot horses too
Street is restricted to meets in Manchester with the RFF crowd.
Damaso
Photojournalist
I think growing up in the city has certainly affected my perspective. I love urban landscapes...
ali_baba
Well-known
i live in chicago - shoot street every day in CHI, and photograph live music all over the county.
festivals, parties, shows.
it's all good fun.
and i love working with my m system (m9/m7 w/leicavit)
i use a nikon d3 and various other medium format cameras and a xpan, but i love the m system best. you all know why!
check my work in my sig.
festivals, parties, shows.
it's all good fun.
and i love working with my m system (m9/m7 w/leicavit)
i use a nikon d3 and various other medium format cameras and a xpan, but i love the m system best. you all know why!
check my work in my sig.
Mcary
Well-known
Live about 50 miles south of Washington DC and mainly shoot people.
Austerby
Well-known
I mostly photograph in south-east London but don't really shoot street photography routinely despite having plenty of material literally on the doorstep - I'm more interested in aspects of the urban landscape, particularly the remaining parts of industrial activity along the banks of the Thames as they're quickly being redeveloped into residential areas. I like landscapes of the gritty kind, rather than bucolic pastoral scenes, which where I live I have not got.
paulfish4570
Veteran
Michael, let's see some horse shots ...
johannielscom
Snorting silver salts
City, mostly street
City, mostly street
However, the way rural Dutch cities are laid out, I would probably qualify as a suburb dweller in the US.
I shoot mainly street, since my portrait work refuses to take off. I want to shoot outside-the-box kinda work, but most subjects want inside-the-box results...
Shifting from portrait to landscape, I wanna be as good as Uncle Earl someday!
City, mostly street
However, the way rural Dutch cities are laid out, I would probably qualify as a suburb dweller in the US.
I shoot mainly street, since my portrait work refuses to take off. I want to shoot outside-the-box kinda work, but most subjects want inside-the-box results...
Shifting from portrait to landscape, I wanna be as good as Uncle Earl someday!
Victor Mercado
Member
I Live on this beautiful Island of Okinawa, I shoot studio portraits.
newspaperguy
Well-known
On the shore of the Chesapeake Bay 40 some miles southeast of Washington DC
in the oldest county in Maryland. (Est 1654) This is where the English explorer
Capt John Smith first saw the white cliffs that reminded him of Dover.
This surprisingly rural - considering it's proximity to DC - county had been all tobacco
farms up until about 10 years ago and the literal death of smoking in the USA.
It is now a bedroom community of 84,000, most of whom commute to DC.
The closest settlement - can't call it a town - to our property is
Lower Marlboro... does something in that name ring a bell?
in the oldest county in Maryland. (Est 1654) This is where the English explorer
Capt John Smith first saw the white cliffs that reminded him of Dover.
This surprisingly rural - considering it's proximity to DC - county had been all tobacco
farms up until about 10 years ago and the literal death of smoking in the USA.
It is now a bedroom community of 84,000, most of whom commute to DC.
The closest settlement - can't call it a town - to our property is
Lower Marlboro... does something in that name ring a bell?
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