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Book Description

Learn to train your eye and improve your timing in order to capture the decisive moment!

Whether it’s due to social media or the introduction of great rangefinder-style digital cameras over a decade ago, street photography has experienced a remarkable resurgence in recent years. You can be roaming the streets of a classic urban environment (New York, Paris, Tokyo) or on a simple photo walk around a quiet neighborhood—it has never been more popular to pursue the art of capturing those candid, fleeting moments that happen throughout the day, of freezing a moment in time and transforming the ordinary into an extraordinary photograph.

But learning to see light and moment, to make quick decisions, and to nail a photographic composition are all crucial skills you must master in order to become a good street photographer. Photographer, instructor, and author Valerie Jardin has been teaching photographers how to take better photographs for years, and in Street Photography Assignments: 75 Reasons to Hit the Streets and Learn, she provides dozens of prompts for you to practice in order to refine and improve your craft.

These activities focus on themes such as:

 • Street portraits
 • Gesture
 • Shadows
 • Silhouettes
 • Rim light
 • Humor
 • Abstract
 • Tension
 • Motion
 • Reflections
 • Leading lines
 • Creative framing
 • Juxtapositions
 • Double exposures
 • And much, much more!

Each assignment includes a description of the technique, various tips and tricks to practice, technical and compositional considerations, and an example photo that Jardin has captured when practicing the same exercise. Whether you have 30 minutes or 3 hours, each assignment is an opportunity for you to take your camera and hit the streets. No more excuses!

Book Description

Learn to train your eye and improve your timing in order to capture the decisive moment!

Whether it’s due to social media or the introduction of great rangefinder-style digital cameras over a decade ago, street photography has experienced a remarkable resurgence in recent years. You can be roaming the streets of a classic urban environment (New York, Paris, Tokyo) or on a simple photo walk around a quiet neighborhood—it has never been more popular to pursue the art of capturing those candid, fleeting moments that happen throughout the day, of freezing a moment in time and transforming the ordinary into an extraordinary photograph.

But learning to see light and moment, to make quick decisions, and to nail a photographic composition are all crucial skills you must master in order to become a good street photographer. Photographer, instructor, and author Valerie Jardin has been teaching photographers how to take better photographs for years, and in Street Photography Assignments: 75 Reasons to Hit the Streets and Learn, she provides dozens of prompts for you to practice in order to refine and improve your craft.

These activities focus on themes such as:

 • Street portraits
 • Gesture
 • Shadows
 • Silhouettes
 • Rim light
 • Humor
 • Abstract
 • Tension
 • Motion
 • Reflections
 • Leading lines
 • Creative framing
 • Juxtapositions
 • Double exposures
 • And much, much more!

Each assignment includes a description of the technique, various tips and tricks to practice, technical and compositional considerations, and an example photo that Jardin has captured when practicing the same exercise. Whether you have 30 minutes or 3 hours, each assignment is an opportunity for you to take your camera and hit the streets. No more excuses!

Table of Contents

  1. Cover
  2. Title
  3. Copyright
  4. Dedication
  5. About the Author
  6. Contents
  7. Introduction
  8. Assignments
    1. 1 Street Performers
    2. 2 Street Portrait
    3. 3 Environmental Portrait
    4. 4 Street Portrait with a Story
    5. 5 Photographing Children
    6. 6 Eye Contact
    7. 7 Creative Self-Portraits
    8. 8 Silhouettes
    9. 9 Silhouettes with Sunburst
    10. 10 Rim Light
    11. 11 Shadows
    12. 12 Shafts of Light
    13. 13 Golden Hour
    14. 14 Blue Hour
    15. 15 From Shadows into Light
    16. 16 Bokeh
    17. 17 The Street at Night
    18. 18 The Correct Step
    19. 19 All About Color
    20. 20 Photographing the Back of People
    21. 21 The Timeless Subject
    22. 22 Gesture
    23. 23 Humor
    24. 24 Humanity Without People in the Frame
    25. 25 Go Fishing
    26. 26 The Minimalist Approach in the Urban Landscape
    27. 27 The Minimalist Approach in the Natural World
    28. 28 Juxtaposition
    29. 29 Interconnections
    30. 30 Reflections in Water
    31. 31 Reflections in Glass
    32. 32 Reflection in a Mirror
    33. 33 Split Image Reflection
    34. 34 Double Exposure
    35. 35 Natural Creative Filter
    36. 36 Creative Framing
    37. 37 Creative Focusing
    38. 38 Rule of Thirds
    39. 39 Centering Your Subject
    40. 40 Letting the Subject Come to You
    41. 41 Looking In
    42. 42 Looking Out
    43. 43 Looking Up
    44. 44 Looking Down
    45. 45 Low Angle
    46. 46 Leading Lines
    47. 47 Negative Space
    48. 48 Creating Tension
    49. 49 Layers
    50. 50 Panning
    51. 51 Slow Shutter Speed
    52. 52 Tilt It Like You Mean It
    53. 53 Using a Specialty Lens
    54. 54 Using Your Camera’s Advanced Filters
    55. 55 Using Billboards or Storefronts
    56. 56 Using Signage
    57. 57 Iconic Landmark
    58. 58 Story in Multiple Frames
    59. 59 Play in the Rain
    60. 60 Public Transportation
    61. 61 Train Station Platforms
    62. 62 Airports
    63. 63 Hands
    64. 64 Feet
    65. 65 Umbrellas
    66. 66 Hats
    67. 67 Dogs
    68. 68 Love
    69. 69 Readers
    70. 70 Limitations
    71. 71 Color x 4
    72. 72 Shop Owners
    73. 73 Artists and Their Spaces
    74. 74 Photograph an Event
    75. 75 Photograph a Fair at Night
  9. Conclusion: Get Lost on Purpose
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