Tompas
Wannabe Künstler
(...) How do you feel about others sneakily photographing you and your friend/family, then posting the images on the internet?
If the images are good by all means go publish them!
(...) How do you feel about others sneakily photographing you and your friend/family, then posting the images on the internet?
Interesting question:
How often is hip-shooting really surreptitious? Given that's it often done at pretty close quarters, I wonder sometimes if people are more aware of the photographer than he/she may think. To take Lynn's example...doesn't appear to be a crowded beach. Was the girl aware of the photographer and camera? It could be. Some of the examples posted here certainly give the viewer the sense that the subject is at least aware of the photographer and camera's presence, if not necessarily the presence of "le click".
Complex stuff!
I'm pretty sure that with every hip-shot I did, the person(s) on the photo noticed me and my camera, but not the click. So you don't change the situation just because people know they are being photographed.
How about using the Golden Rule as guidance? How do you feel about others sneakily photographing you and your friend/family, then posting the images on the internet?
That would be easy. Then I'd shoot much more because I don't care for myself. Except if I had some style accidents like an open fly or a big coffee spot on the shirt 😀
Indeed you get noticed when shooting from the hip. Especially with a odd looking camera such as a Leica.
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Lynn, that photograph is just stunning. The color and texture of the ocean really takes my breath away.
Now, not so seriously: You should have broken that girl's contemplation to ask if it was okay to take the photograph. Then you could have gotten her forcing a smile and maybe making a V sign with her fingers. That would have been cool.
Re: Chris101's photo ... I don't think she looks angry, just bewildered. She seems to be in the middle of a conversation with her friend and her brain is trying to figure out what's going on around her.
Regarding the morality of shooting from the hip, I don't think it's a big deal. Personally, I like it if the subject KNOWS that I'm taking a photo ... typically I never hide the fact that I'm carrying a camera around. I try to make it obvious.
I'll ask for permission if it's feasible or seems the better strategy -- but sometimes this is not always possible. Plus, asking permission can change the whole dynamic of the subject + scene, removing elements of spontaneity.
My answer to the street shooting morality 'question' is always the same -- people are photographed hundreds of times every day, at mundane places like the bank, the grocery store, the gas station, the ATM's, etc. etc. ... and those businesses never ask for 'permission' in the overt sense of the word. In fact, I think if most people thought about it, they would find it much more objectionable to have their image recorded daily by hidden CCTV's, than some bloke wandering around with a camera on the street.
If I'm carrying around a camera for my own private use, then according to notions of common law and public property, there is nothing legally wrong with taking photos from the hip or elbow or wherever.
People who put hip shots of kids on the internet, aren't these worthy of a bash in the head?
Imagine searching the internet and the picture of your young daughter is posted in some photography forum by a middle aged guy? wouldn't that piss the most calm of individuals?
And yes, I'm having in mind a certain set of pictures posted in this very thread.
People who put hip shots of kids on the internet, aren't these worthy of a bash in the head?
Imagine searching the internet and the picture of your young daughter is posted in some photography forum by a middle aged guy? wouldn't that piss the most calm of individuals?
And yes, I'm having in mind a certain set of pictures posted in this very thread.