wp-user-avatar
domain was triggered too early. This is usually an indicator for some code in the plugin or theme running too early. Translations should be loaded at the init
action or later. Please see Debugging in WordPress for more information. (This message was added in version 6.7.0.) in /home2/kochitqs/public_html/fwdlife/wp-includes/functions.php on line 6121advanced-ads
domain was triggered too early. This is usually an indicator for some code in the plugin or theme running too early. Translations should be loaded at the init
action or later. Please see Debugging in WordPress for more information. (This message was added in version 6.7.0.) in /home2/kochitqs/public_html/fwdlife/wp-includes/functions.php on line 6121zox-news
domain was triggered too early. This is usually an indicator for some code in the plugin or theme running too early. Translations should be loaded at the init
action or later. Please see Debugging in WordPress for more information. (This message was added in version 6.7.0.) in /home2/kochitqs/public_html/fwdlife/wp-includes/functions.php on line 6121The post In Thomas Leuthard’s World appeared first on FWD Life | The Premium Lifestyle Magazine |.
]]>Thomas Leuthard began his journey on street exploration in 2009 when he acquired a Nikon 85mm prime lens. The Swiss photographer started his project ‘85mm Street photography’, and over a change of many lens, he fell in love with the spry streets. To step into his monochrome world, you need to take a visual tour of his work which he has been able to capture amidst the humdrum routines of street life.
For me street photography is “taking a walk with the camera” where you are observing and documenting the life of other people. For me it’s a kind of lifestyle, a compensation to my work as an IT professional and a reason to
go out.
Well, photography has nothing to do with cameras or apps. Photography is about capturing something you have encountered or seen. Of course, there will be more photographs taken every day than the day before. But this doesn’t mean that those are good photos and that they all tell a story. People are always snapping things, but there is no ‘new type’ of photography. There is more trash being produced and it is getting harder to find the pearls in the pile of everyday snaps.
This is the biggest problem nowadays. Every one of us sees hundreds of photos every day. The quality and expectation for a good photo is being raised over time as we get used to it. Therefore everything we have seen already will be conventional. As a photographer you have to find new things, new views, new techniques or just new ways of showing existing things. This is the hardest part when you want to be successful. Things repeat itself too quickly.
I don’t like colour in photographs, but cities are too colourful today, which makes most of the photos useless. Often backgrounds are too distracting with colour, while a black and white photo focuses more on structures, forms, content and emotions. Some people say it’s easier, some say it’s more difficult. For me, it is what I like best.
I was in the Stockholm library when a lady with striped pants walked in. I remembered that there was a striped staircase at the entrance. I checked and decided that It would be the perfect shot. So I waited until she came back. How long would someone stay in a library? She took five minutes, and I was ready.
I was having a bite at Burger King once. A lady was sitting at a table next to me with her back facing me, and she was wearing a striped dress. And behind her I noticed a radiator with a similar pattern. A quick break from my burger got me this shot, right at the lunch table. Sometimes photographs come to you; sometimes go to the photographs.
You believe that street photography should look into “storytelling and composition-focused approach”. Do you think a photograph should have an equal balance between composition and content?
It needs both. A strong story without composition and a good composition without story doesn’t work. So find a story and put it into a frame in a good way. The stronger both parts are, the better.
Junichi Hakoyama
Thomas Toft
R▲F▲VT
Sometimes one photograph can tell everything you want to see and you don’t need to get more information. This is the challenge of photography, to tell stories in single frames. Of course, using more frames helps and makes it easier. In street photography we normally shoot single frames only.
Yes, there are many moments which you can forecast. Human often act as humans and we can often see what will happen next. But, you have to be prepared and always expect the unexpected.
I have learned that the camera doesn’t make a difference. It’s all about your eye and this needs to be trained. The only training is practicing on the streets and not on the Internet. Shoot 500,000 shots in 10,000 hours and you
might become a master. Compositionis not about rules, it’s about harmony to your eyes. If you are not following the composition principles, your photographs will never appeal any eye
Technology doesn’t change anything in photography. You still have to find your subject and compose it. The only thing that changes is the black box which creates the photo. People who thinks that technology will change photography itself, may have not understood it at all.
Shoot what you see and not what others want to see. Don’t listen to anyone else. Do what you like to do and do it often.
Words by Atheena Wilson Photographs by Thomas Leuthard
The post In Thomas Leuthard’s World appeared first on FWD Life | The Premium Lifestyle Magazine |.
]]>