Behind the Scenes | with Matt Stuart on Street Photography
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- čas přidán 21. 12. 2022
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We're going behind the scenes with world-renowned street and documentary photographer Matt Stuart in Soho and Oxford Circus. We'll discuss his recent books and projects alongside giving you insight into his process. This course is supported by Leica.
Matt Stuart is a British street photographer. He is a member of Up Photographers. Stuart has had work published and exhibited all over the globe. His books of street photography include All That Life Can Afford and Into the Fire.
The BTS will cover:
Planning - knowing your environment.
Gear and technical requirements.
Discussing work styles, techniques and shooting.
Takeaway tips and techniques.
#WexHowTo #OnlinePhotoCourses - Jak na to + styl
Thank you to all the comments from people who enjoyed the video. I’m glad you like it, it was certainly a hectic shoot!
I'm happy to hear you say that most shots are misses, because coming from a more experienced photographer to an amateur, this is reassuring. I also find the process rewarding even if the end result is less than I had hoped.
Well said!
@@WexPhotoVideo I have a2-5% keeper rate. Same for ICM.
Mask On Nurse Marty (Ret)
About time someone stuck up for lefties. Loved left eye, left hand & left focused. Truly enjoyed. Very talented. Thanks
"Looking stupid - I have it down to a fine art" !! Brilliant video for any street photographer to watch and learn from. Matt is the master
Haha - that part made us laugh too. Thanks, John!
@@WexPhotoVideo I also use my touch screen a lot. It is set up to touch to focus then take the image. I try not to touch the shutter. I also use the electronic shutter so it is silent. Not touching the shutter and no shutter sounds = no photograph being taken.
Oh yes, keep moving on. Unless the subject is mightily upset they won’t follow me.
Mask On Nurse Marty (Ret)
This was amazing. It's always fantastic how great photographers like Matt have such clear thoughts about their photography and think in such detail about every aspect.
Thanks, Debi! He really is amazing to watch work :D
matts eye for detail blew my mind in this video. To pick up on something as simple as hand size truly shows him as a master of his craft.
This is the content we need! There are so many great modern street photographers that need a video like this. So inspiring and motivating, really! Thanks for the video!
Great to se Matt in action. I got his Think Like a Street Photographer (fantastic), but watching him in full effect was real nice.
So refreshing to see Matt hitting the street ! Great video, hoping to see more like this !
Glad you enjoyed! There is definitely more to come
love Matt Stuart. great video.
Really informative video. Good to see how Matt shoots in the field. Thanks.
Glad you enjoyed it
What a treat…love Matt’s work, and to see him in action on Oxford Street was an inspiring masterclass!
amazing! Thank you so much for sharing!
This was very educational I appreciate this behind the scenes as I also dabble in street photography but as a hobby gave me lost of perspective especially on the left hand /right side as well as him saying to have fun and not take it seriously
A very enjoyable watch, great guy great work.
Thanks for watching!
Cracking video. Love more like this
Great insight, what a nice bloke too
Wow. That was just great!
Thank you! Great to hear.
Street photography in London - or any big city - it's so easy to get great shots. What I love about Martin Parr, for instance, is that he gets great images in the English country town of Buttf*ck Nowhere.
Same here! What a gent :)
Really enjoyed this. 😊
Awesome, thank you!
"Looking stupid " who would have thought that was good photography advice 😊 great work Matt
Great to hear!
thanks matt
That was really fun. It is nice to see similarities and differences to the way other's and I shoot. I should also say that I love Matt's positive vibes! Good one!
We had the best time making it, too! Matt is a great photographer and educator
Great vid Matt
Thank you! We had so much fun making it.
His pigeon photo is still my favourite for some reason ha.
Loved this entire video but I especially loved the human and personal words by Matt at the very end. Well done!
What a fantastic video, thank you for sharing and thanks to Matt for creating it. Refreshing to get insight on approach, rationale and technique instead of tons of camera settings info, extremely enjoyable to watch.
Thank you, Keith! We had a lot of fun making it.
@@WexPhotoVideo I agree with another's positive comment about the production team as well, superb job. West end in Xmas mode will be mental so credit where it is due.
Great guy and photographer& he's starting to look more like Bruce GiIlden in every new video I see him in
Great episode, Matt is so fast I couldn't tag along that's for sure
We definitely moved quick that day :')
thats so rad. Thank you Matt!
informative 20mins Thanks Wex.
Super ❤
Great behind the scenes, guys! full of energy, insight, and a lot of fun. More videos like this, please!!
Thanks, Hugo!
@@WexPhotoVideo thank you!
I agree with u Hugo..so tru
@@TheUrbandilema Yes! we all agree ahah Wex let us know if you need help creating these as well! 😉
Love this video. I will try to get out after Christmas.
Fantastic video. Great photographer. Really nice guy. 👏🏻
The "faint" is a Winogrand move.
Dude is cool
What shutter speed is he at to never stop walking? 1000?
Hey Nicholas, it's actually analogue - the level of skill and speed was really amazing to watch. Practice, I believe!
Matt rocks! :)
Indeed he does!
Very good!
Thanks, Malte
King Matt🎉
Great statement at 12' about the why of (street) photography. Feel the same.
What model Mission Workshop bag is that please?
amazing vid first dt phot vid that was pleasant to look at , cause guy speaks takes action and we see some images also streets and vid shot on normal camera not phone crap . very energetic and thrilled alike me unlike many . also guy is bluntly honest about his successes ( missing most a shots yet doing it for the sake of deed itself) . cheers @georges_angeles
Love this video, keep these coming. "Looking Stupid" Ha Ha.
Haha - made us chuckle too.
Tye 'faint' is a Winogrand trick. 'fushing' on a building corner is Meyerowitz technique. Walking the streets constantly is a HCB technique. Nothing new here. Great photographer though
👍❤️👍
Excellent waiting for the next Master Class
Thanks, David! More coming soon :)
Looking stupid and checking out the camera in a confused fashion is a great tip.
Excellent. Always a treat to watch how others work. But perhaps more importantly, do you cut your own cheese?
excellent im now grabbing my fuji x10 and putting it to a classic film setting and looking for a guy with a walking stick nose thanks for sharing.
Thank you! Glad you enjoyed it.
The man who's been sitting on Oxford Street for 20 years - His name is Paul
This is madness. I guess it works for him but. Not for me. 😅
Haha - we struggled to keep up
You can tell Matt is influenced by Garry Winogrand - so many similarities in their shooting techniques!
A block of cheese!
Shooting film is a waste of money. There just isn’t a need for it anymore. It’s definitely a niche for those searching for views on social media.
Shoot film like a "crack habit"...that's exactly why I don't shoot film anymore
Not being difficult but aren't there issues re: taking photos without the person's consent?...
Not in the UK
In a public space there is no law stopping photography
@@stewartweir3425 Funny how some people expect the police to step in when "wrong pronouns" are used, whatever that means, in the real world of hard-working taxpayers, but you can shove a camera in me & my wife's face and get away with it. And if the "subject" tells the "artist" they're harassed, alarmed & distressed, the photographer gets away with it. Is this for real???...
@@EssexCountyPhoto In France it’s against the law. If you want a state where there are limited/no freedoms try North Korea. In the meantime street photography has been responsible for the documentation of social history and culture since the invention of film. What would history look like if nobody took photos in public? Have a read about the Law of Unintended Consequences sometime.
@@stewartweir3425 As a Frenchman I do feel enlightened. Interesting to see that people like you instantly refer to extremes (North Korea) when others merely point out facts they politely but strongly disagree with.
Such as letting people know their face might be plastered on social media for billions to see within an instant.
As an emergency worker who on many occasions had to physically push back absolute morons filming and taking photos on their phones while I was doing CPR on a dying casualty, I understand your obsession with recording meaningful social events for posterity and art.
The families of the deceased might disagree though...
What about a country where "staring" (please define in law) at someone on the tube can get you arrested?
Care to guess?
Yes! That's right! It's here!!!
In the good old land of socia (with variable bias) history and "culture".
This law allowing you to take pictures of anyone in the streets is terrible and seem outdated in our digital world. Also, the law does not forbid you to ask after taking the shot and then deleting (on digital) or not using it (like here on CZcams for example), after all, it's a person's moment in his life, not the photographer's creation.
what is so terrible about it? what do you think happens? do photographers steal souls of passersby?
@@mjakotka I understand that some people may feel their privacy is violated when I take their photograph. They are of course correct. My explaining that they don’t have a reasonable expectation of privacy isn’t going to make them feel better. The same with my telling them they are videoed everyday as they walk the street by the state or ATM machines.
It is best not to have this confrontation or conversation. I take my picture and move on. No muss or fuss.
Mask On Nurse Marty (Ret)
Do you guys call this street photography?? He only faces old women, it's obvious he's afraid of men of his size and height... And this type of shooting... What does this man's work tell us about our society? Our way of life?? It feels empty, no message
Do you even know about his body of work ? This man is a master
@@colormix6888 I can't see why, honestly. It's a man assaulting women with the camera, look to their reactions when he points them with the camera. This is not art.
Everyone is entitled to their view. I doubt most will agree with you though.
@@colormix6888 he’s good… Far from a master though..
@@luisparra5075 assaulting women lmao. you guys are insufferable.