I have given this some thought by thinking about what I do, and what I see others do (or rather the results) and the equipment used doesn't seem to bear any correlation to the success of the work. I follow a few people on Flickr who use SLRs with zoom lenses, things I personally would find too bulky but they make some very fine street and candid shots; ones that sometimes make me think, if I had a zoom...But I've been there and it doesn't work for me.
Then I have given it some thought about what I use, apart from manual focus, they all different, a SLR (well 2, 2 x OM2n), a rangefinder (M2) and a TLR (Autocord) so the kind of camera is actually a little irrelevant as well to me; as I can turn results out on any of these. Familiarity is in fact the most important part if anything about the camera, I know where all the controls are and that's all that is needed.
And my use of primes stems more from me preferring primes when shooting, I just cannot get on with zooms for anything. Odd I know but what the heck.
So, what constitutes how I prefer to do my street shooting?
The only thing I can think of that is important to me as a film shooter is using negative material. I just cannot do street with slide film, with the Autocord and M2, I would miss too many shots. At least with negative I can more or less take a pot shot exposure wise (and rarely am I wrong, unless using Ektar) and then just work for a few hours with the only adjustments made for depth of field reasons.
Pre-focusing, hyper focal, different lenses, different cameras, different colour cameras etc. are really not that important at all to me in the grand scheme of things are these things just sort themselves out as I work. The only thing I pre-meditate is that choice of film (usually Tri X, FP4+ or some Portra material for colour) and the kind of shots I might be looking for. I sort of go into autopilot with the rest of the stuff. It's almost like being unconscious
🙂
Apart from that, I also like to strike up conversations with people, the usage of old cameras is a good talking point to butter people up and do a portrait on the street. I quite like doing these as they are sort of a half way house between utterly candid and a posed portrait (often I'll fiddle about with the TLR after I have taken the shot so they are completely unaware that I caught them at their most natural, but not 'fess' up on it, makes them feel they were at their best -- which I find is rarely the case when taking a portrait.)
