Tag Archives: Street

Snapping A Few Shots On The Streets Of Liverpool

Yesterday I blogged on the way to take a good photo at night. This is my attempt at a bit of street photography in the day. 

So, the other day, I went to Liverpool. It was no more of a different day than most. I went on the train, and I had a day to just wander around (or until I got bored and got the train home).

So, I took my camera, and thought to start with that I’ll us my Canon 24-105 lens. The first shot that I came across was this, and decided to grab it.

A dying art?

It’s a sight that may well be disappearing from view, in a way. A newspaper seller is selling a plain, tree, newspaper. I have no data on whether they are declining, or increasing, or staying roughly the same, but it seems like everything is going digital, so less of a call for sellers.

I took the shot at a longish zoom to get the image without interfering, and to test the water of what seemed acceptable in Liverpool. It was fine. The next shot I got a bit closer for.

Man making a sand dog

The man was making a dog out of sand. I dropped some money in his hat, and took a few pictures. I always drop a few coins in a hat if it’s requested when taking photos. It’s polite, and more often than not, they’ll act up for you – that’s not what i’m after, essentially, but it means they may pause for a second to allow you to get the shot you’re after. I grabbed a few, and left, in just a few seconds.

You’ll notice that I’ve processed these to be low on contrast too. They were backlit from the sun, so to keep the detail (the 7D is fantastic for this) I decreased the highlights, brought detail from the shadows, and added a slight vignette. The 24-105 at f4 also seems to lend itself well to this kind of processing.

Now, the sun decided to come out from behind the sky, and at the same time, I decided to stick my fisheye on.

The Sun on Liverpool

Just taking it in the middle of the street looking upwards – nothing special. I aimed to keep the exposure lower to compensate for the sun. I have lowered the contrast in it, and added a darker gradient over the sky to keep the blue of the sky. This is pretty much how I processed the next few shots as well, using the sun as a main light source in camera.

Sing us a song, you're the piano man

This meant I had to get fairly close and point the camera upwards, and the end result works well, I thought. The sky has a vignette around the corners, and a slight grad to keep the blues in the colour and the sky from being blown out, but it was hard to keep it all in without going overly HDR – a look I do not want. The slight flare and distorted buildings work well, in my opinion.

And, my favourite of the day, is this.

Liverpool One

The main Liverpool One centre, with two suns (actually, I’m sure you guessed, one reflected off the metal work). I exposed to keep enough detail in the sky and the shadows – hard, but as we’ve grasped, the 7D can do that. I used a grad over the sky to darken the sky and boost the colour, and I boosted up the shadows to include more detail. The original looks bad, whereas the edited one (without much more than would have been done in the days of film) looks pretty good.

Low ISO is key if you’re manipulating shadows so much, otherwise it is noisy, grainy, and in extreme cases, banding appears. Not pleasant.

Final two for today are quite simple. One right underneath Lime Street station, with a grad, and one really close to a train.

Liverpool Lime Street

Arriva 175 009

I hoped you enjoyed these. Please share around if you did, and click through to the Flickr pages to see the shots large.

Andrew.

Insight Into The Mind Of A Photographer?

LONDON can be very boring, really.

Yes – It’s big. Yes – It’s got a lot to do. Yes – it’s very cultural aware with many hundreds of languages spoken in the capital of one of the best countries on earth (Notice i said one of… they could all be the best, therefore, it might technically be the worst… ok….)

Well. It has these sights you see. Sights to you and me, home to the Queen and Prince Philip, etc. It’s called Buckingham Palace.

When i went there recently, i was in the middle of my work experience with the BBC. BBC Radio Five Live. News is my thing. Tourism, less so. But i went out because i wanted to “see” London. The best parts, the famous parts. And Buck House bored me. Nothing to take a photo of, not really. Then it struck me. All these people around me are really interesting. Interesting in the way i know nothing about them. So lets take photo’s of them.

To start with, I’m going to take a look at a place other than Buckingham Palace. Westminster, actually. Many interesting people there, quite a lot i’d like to be in a radio studio with a live mic with together. Because they would be really fun to interview!

But, the Tamil Tiger Protesters. I don’t know them. And probably will have no way of ever knowing them. But, aren’t they interesting:

Tamil Protestors

Now… Buckingham Palace. The people, actually. Yeah, let’s take a look at one or two. This guy had a Canon 5D MKII – incidentally, I’d love one. But what is he thinking?

Big Camera

This guy had to take a picture of his girlfriend outside Buck House. But, where did he come from? Does he earn nice money in a job he loves? How did they meet? Is he under the thumb?

Snappy

Are these people having a nice holiday? Is three a crowd?

Say Cheese

Does it work? Does she know what button to press? How long has she had a mobile for? Is it even hers?

What button do i press?

Nice shirt. Why are you wearing that on a nice sunny sunday like today? Whats with the Nikon – what influenced your decision?

Everyone has a camera

Is the man a photographer? Are they looking for a good composition? Or is he just telling her how to use it? Does she know herself and teaching him? Who else will see this picture?

Is this right?

Did this man get the shot he wanted? Is he going to have to take it again?

Hmm..

Why do brits always do this when it’s a bit sunny and there’s some water!?

Enjoy The Sun

And finally… The big questions of all? Whats it doing here? Where is the reporter? Who is it? Is it live? Am i on national TV?

And we go live to Buckingham Palace..

See – loads of questions! But the answers aren’t always that amazing.

Never mind – street photography is very intriguing, and fun.