
Mitul Shah test-drives a backpack designed for photographers always on the move.
iso.500px.com2017-12-24 18:30
Mitul Shah test-drives a backpack designed for photographers always on the move.
iso.500px.com
Fujifilm creates some of the smallest cameras, powered with amazing film emulations, great lenses, and quick autofocus. However, narrowing down the best cameras from a vast portfolio can be challenging, and that's why you have us to the ob.
Street photography is a genre that requires a camera that is not just compact but also offers an exceptional autofocus, battery life, and resolution. This combination can make things a bit challenging for some and often leave one feeling lost.
To do street photography, you truly don't need a whole lot of equipment. It can be done easily with very simple gear. But making something truly extraordinary can require much more advanced gear. However, it will also require a completely different creative vision.
I think Diane Arbus used to say that photographers should never put their camera away until they're back home. And there are many times where I've indeed wanted to stop shooting after a long day, shove the camera in my bag, and carry on with life.
If you've become a street photographer of some sort, then I'm pretty sure that you're doing this and thinking that social media is the pinnacle of your photography career. But it really isn't. Beyond that, you can network to have people buy your prints, you can branch out into other genres, and you can even have your work in galleries.
If you take someone's portrait, it's very well understood that you're collaborating with that person. Today's content creators often just shoot at 20 frames a second while a model moves in front of there camera.
Sony is one of the few companies that stood against the DSLR tide and switched to mirrorless early on in the race. That, in fact, bodes well for the manufacturer, with Sony easily being ahead of the game.