








Very nice series! I like the friendly smiles, and there just something extra in that last one of the modest muslim ladies... 🙂
1024) {this.width=1024;this.alt='Click here to see a large version';}" onmouseover="if(this.alt) this.style.cursor='pointer';" onclick="if(this.alt) window.open('https://farm1.staticflickr.com/908/39854124580_8881643b22_b.jpg');" border="0">Great stuff, Kuuan!
man, you are...Good! and you are using manual lens!
i just got this 7-Artisans 25mm f1.8 manual lens and now half of the photos are not in focus...i need your skill












this post foremost is intended to "up" my last post asking for opinion about my friend Victor's street photography. He is very concentrated and talented and would profit from critic and / or encouragement.
A quote of his: ""I'm really obsessed with the composition, looking after matching colors, lines, simple and tidy backgrounds, kind of minimal street photography, and of course, adding the human factor. Without exception, in my frames, the subject and the spot must match somehow, colors, gestures, something that complements each other nicely."
my sample below only partly represents that but is a bit of a similar genre, hoping to encourage you to check out his photography by clicking on the link provided in my last post above.
Untitled by andreas, on Flickr, C.V. Heliar f4.5/15mm, Sony NEX5n, Bangkok 2018
thank you Doug!
street photography, if not mostly graphic but showing people, is said having to be candid. My photos above mostly aren't either. As an obvious foreigner I prefer asking people if I can take their photo and have them take their pose.
Hijab, head scarfs and traditional looking clothes, in Indonesia, have become "cool" and "fashionable" these days and do not necessarily denote religious, less fundamentally religious persons. The ladies had been busy posing to each other and taking selfies, see below, that made me dare ask them for their pic.