Thanks! I appreciate the kind words.This has to be one of the most inspiring and moving threads on RFF. Thanks especially to Don, Robert, and Bob for their contributions and to Don for starting the thread. One of the most challenging aspects of street photography for me is overcoming my shyness to ask to take a stranger’s photograph and then to stay with the scene and get to know the person, even a little. I worked on this during a photo workshop last September but still have a long way to go. Hence my admiration for all of the photographs in this thread.
Below is one photograph I made of a young lady who was selling juice in the Jardin du Luxembourg in Paris. I asked if I could make a photo of her and after some hesitation she said yes. I felt like I’d broken through a barrier although in reality it was only a small step towards engaging with a subject.
Portrait of a Young Lady by Steve Macfarlane, on Flickr
That’s a great story! You make a great couple.2013, walking around a rural town in Eastern Cuba, I heard a voice coming from the front porch of a house saying "may I help you?" I found a lady nursing a newborn. I asked her to tell about the town as I knew nothing and had never been there. We spent a delightful 15-20 minutes but no photos as she was nursing. I contacted her a year later asking if I could return and interview her for a project I was working on. She suggested mid-morning at her tiny house. The interview stretched into lunch so she made rice and beans for us.
First photo: her hotplate cooking the rice burst into flames so she let it cool off and rewired it using a table knife as she had no tools. But she never stopped the interview and kept talking. Meanwhile, I'm trying to take notes and occasionally make a photo. My interviews normally went 30-45 minutes. Her's was so good, it took all day. I even returned the next day to complete.
Second photo: two weeks ago, ten years later - she and I on a family trip to the Exumas in the Bahamas. She turned out to be the most important person I have met while photographing.
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this is a great shot!Pianist/songwriter who strapped this old upright into his Nissan pickup truck, adorned it with a stuffed coyote, and parked here & there in Eugene, Oregon to perform.
He treated himself to a sheepskin pad over his wheelwell to sit.
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That’s great!!!😂This guy was in a Tucumcari, New Mexico, RV park in 2015. He was living there long term, not traveling through like we were. I was taking the dog for a morning walk just around sunrise. I'm kinda hazy on the details because he had a lot of stories to tell and I was sort of in a hurry to pack up and get on with our trip. Mainly I recall him saying he was the youngest of 13 children. His father was something of a notorious ladies man. He was married 4 times and out lived all his wives. At the time of his death, he was actively looking for wife number five. Always ready for his next affair, my storyteller said when his father died someone had to jerk him off before they could close the coffin lid.😵
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Just take your time getting to know people. I spent something like 7 years visiting a group of Mennonites back in the mountains before they felt even a little comfortable with me and a camera. Even then some never did.