Carlsen Highway
Well-known
I rarely like to make sweeping generalisations, except about young pakeha's.😀
`There is definately a trend towards younger people assumming they have every right to anything, in fact whatever their whim of the moment might be. '
the kind of sweeping generalization we get far too much of from a certain generation in this country😎
I don't photograph homeless people if they are aware that I am photographing them.
... There is definately a trend towards younger people assumming they have every right to anything, in fact whatever their whim of the moment might be.
There is a huge trend as well in middle aged people believing laws are made for your safety and well being. A trend of giving into to the fear of media and believing television is reality. Lastly a trend of being superior. A young mind is an instinctive mind. It does what feels natural. An old mind has its own set of rules.
My son is sixteen months old. He just recently started his first swimming lessons. On the day of his first class, I brought my camera along to photograph him and my wife in the pool. I figured this was a momentous event that I would really like to record. Before I could shoot a single frame, the lifeguard informed me that photography was forbidden in the pool area. I do understand why this rule is in place. But I was deeply saddened by the whole situation.
Has anyone here shot people at a funeral? I couldn't bring myself to have a camera around during such woeful occasions. Or should I just grow a pair?
i shoot homeless people. nice folk most of 'em.
Has anyone here shot people at a funeral? I couldn't bring myself to have a camera around during such woeful occasions. Or should I just grow a pair?
"Photography is not cute cats, nor nudes, motherhood or arrangements of manufactured products. Under no circumstances it is anything ever anywhere near a beach." Walker Evans
Does anyone agree with this? Maybe he forgot to add something...?
I have photographed a number of "homeless" people. I do some street shooting. But I cannot remember a case of photographing a homeless person until we talked a while and I knew their name. I would say the percentage of really nice interesting folks vs. ordinary ones vs. the *ssholes is the same among the homeless as the overall general population.
Here is one from Memphis, while visiting with Blake Billings a/k/a "Memphis". I saw this woman sitting on the shelter steps while driving by and went around the block to park and go meet her. While walking the half block to the shelter, I met Steven in his wheelchair with his dog Queen. We talked and I photographed them. Then, I asked Steven if he knew the lady on the steps. When he told me that he and Janet were friends, I asked him to introduce us. This photo of Steven, Queen and Janet was my favorite.
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