Learn To Shoot Photos the Henri Cartier-Bresson Way

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  • čas přidán 15. 07. 2023
  • Henri Cartier-Bresson was one of the greatest photographers of all time.
    His use of 'The Decisive Moment' was unparalleled. That split second makes all the difference in a photo.
    I'm going to help you understand The Decisive Moment and how you can improve your chances of creating a photographic masterpiece.
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    all images unless stated:
    © Fondation Henri Cartier-Bresson / Magnum Photos
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Komentáře • 160

  • @ThePhotographicEye
    @ThePhotographicEye  Před 10 měsíci

    Get FREE access to the best selling course 'Learning To See' by signing up for my weekly newsletter 'Saturday Selections'.
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  • @qnetx
    @qnetx Před 11 měsíci +13

    The Decisive Moment is also a key component of successful sports and wildlife photography. When I’m out in the wetlands photographing birds and animals, listening is an invaluable resource as well.

    • @JesusChrist-xb7jq
      @JesusChrist-xb7jq Před 10 měsíci +1

      I was about to say something similar. Not just using your ears, but knowing the layout and finding the best position and knowing the habits of the animals, like how a bird lowers its head right before takeoff.

  • @Mister_EL.
    @Mister_EL. Před 11 měsíci +10

    I find Bresson's images breathtaking! Nothing to do with the technicals, but the moments are so unique and strong...

  • @tylerwhitney
    @tylerwhitney Před 11 měsíci +7

    "A symphony of elements" is exactly what I would call a beautiful and successful image. I will be using that from now on!! ❤

  • @tunasandwich8049
    @tunasandwich8049 Před 6 měsíci +1

    Candid photographs are the best kind of photographs
    It really immerses you to the natural lifestyle of the people at that moment
    Bresson's work actually opened my eyes to seeing that the people back then were not so different than us

  • @dreacul
    @dreacul Před 11 měsíci +3

    The subway sequence at 5:20 is filmed in my town, Bucharest hahaa and that particular station is a place where I enjoy taking photos. Felt nice, it connected me to the story.

  • @klartext2225
    @klartext2225 Před 11 měsíci +4

    Thanks for showing me some HCB pictures I never saw before! About half I know be heart now (owning 4 books on HCB), but he must have shot sooo much stuff there will always be more. And you never get tired of seeing fresh stuff from his archives.
    PLUS: Your wedding photography is really special, I like your empathy there! Decisive moments all around, beautiful. :-)))

  • @jonathanm9436
    @jonathanm9436 Před 11 měsíci +7

    I found this one to be so very instructive - not only about the decisive moment (which reminds us what to look for) but also about the patience that is required to wait for it to occur. Not to force it, or there's luck with 400 shots of hope. Both Cartier-Bresson's images obviously, and yours, show us that there are many moments of magic even in modern orchestrated events. I'll watch this video again.

    • @ThePhotographicEye
      @ThePhotographicEye  Před 11 měsíci

      Thank you

    • @jonathanm9436
      @jonathanm9436 Před 11 měsíci

      @@ThePhotographicEye And I did (watch it again). Well worth reinforcing the messages. Great stuff.

  • @hurleygreen927
    @hurleygreen927 Před 11 měsíci +1

    You're highlighting one of THE BEST photographers of all time! I especially enjoy the black and white images for moodiness... THANKS FOR THIS!

  • @SylvainDuford
    @SylvainDuford Před 11 měsíci +8

    Sorry to contradict, but HBC never talked of "The Decisive Moment", that was the translation chosen by his editor and he didn't agree with it and was slightly miffed by all the talk about "Decisive Moment" being attributed to him. The title he used for his book in French was "Images à la Sauvette" which translates to "Images on the run" or "Images on the sly". If you insist on using moment instead of image, it would be more like "The fleeting moment".
    So it never was about planning or waiting for the "decisive moment". It was more about being attentive and ready to catch that fleeting moment when it appears in front of you.

    • @lorenschwiderski
      @lorenschwiderski Před 11 měsíci

      Yes!

    • @gsx-phantom645
      @gsx-phantom645 Před 11 měsíci

      To say it was NEVER about planning or waiting I feel is doing Bresson a disservice since it implies a random approach (or luck) to his photography and I certainly don't see that in his body of work. I does look to me like he's often seen an opportunity develop and waited for elements to align before pressing the shutter...

    • @DanScott1
      @DanScott1 Před 11 měsíci

      Spot on. And that being attentive and ready is about how connected you are with you and the heights of your own joy frequency. That's why he danced, he was excited, lighter and expectant.

    • @lorenschwiderski
      @lorenschwiderski Před 11 měsíci

      @@gsx-phantom645 The quote of all times has to be, "luck favors the prepared." It is true that a shot is prepared, but it is usually within a matter of seconds, while other times in a second. We will never see Bresson's misses, as he would say, he is but a human. He loved people, and this helped in relations between his camera, his eye, and the world about him. Being an artist, he had a grip on composition -- the geometry. This is possibly why he preferred the use of 50mm, the less distortion and best composition lens one can have for a split second image. I hope you are enjoying your street photography. We can agree that Bresson is one of the best. Take care and have fun, Loren

  • @marcuzas1
    @marcuzas1 Před 11 měsíci +10

    Looking at HCB’s contact sheets was a relief for me in that they revealed he commonly shot an entire roll of images of a scene before choosing the one which would later become iconic. It means his magic is accessible to most any photographer if they have an eye for possibilities and a bit of patience.

    • @c.augustin
      @c.augustin Před 11 měsíci +1

      This "shot an entire roll of images" would be the reason why he adopted the Leica (or rather a very small 35 mm camera) for his work, as it was a) small and unobtrusive and b) far cheaper per shot than any other format of the time. I think there was even a famous image that took him more than one roll (I remember seeing two sheets of a particular scene, but I might be mistaken).

    • @SylvainDuford
      @SylvainDuford Před 11 měsíci

      Yeah, and from the number system he used to mark his rolls of film, it is estimated that he took around 300,000 photos during his life. Only about 20 or so are famous. So don't lose patience or despair because you're not good at catching "the decisive moment".

    • @yeohi
      @yeohi Před 11 měsíci +1

      @@SylvainDuford He took many 100s of fantastic photos of equal quality to your so-called famous ones. His thousands of photos of lesser quality are still out of reach of most photographers. No reason to despair. No matter hard you practice the 100-yard dash, you're not gonna catch Usain Bolt.

    • @BrunoChalifour
      @BrunoChalifour Před 9 měsíci

      "he commonly shot an entire roll of images of a scene" ... let us not replace one myth by another. Both are erroneous. "Behind Gare Str Lazare" being such a counter example of what you are asserting and there are loads of other counter examples.

  • @lesformes462
    @lesformes462 Před 11 měsíci +1

    Alex, (if I might be so bold) u explore passionately so many aspects of photography that are not only instructive but also thought provoking, I thank you for your enthusiasm in shearing unselfishly your gift in today algorithm driven world.

  • @FlyFishingProf
    @FlyFishingProf Před 11 měsíci +4

    As many of you have commented, these videos by Alex are a jewel within the CZcams world. Very professional produced and presented. I’ve been watching/following Alex’s videos from the beginning and, besides the content, it dawned on me why I keep returning to watch his short films. It’s Alex. Yes the content is special, but Alex as the presenter is what draws me into each presentation, always watching to the end. As always, I look forward to his next video.
    Thank you Alex, I wish you the best.

    • @ThePhotographicEye
      @ThePhotographicEye  Před 11 měsíci

      Wow, thank you! Thanks really very kind of you to say so.
      I really appreciate your support!

  • @RogerDeakins349
    @RogerDeakins349 Před 11 měsíci +5

    *_Dear Sir, with all due respect, I'd like to humbly request you to make a video on all "Photographic Terms" "Photography Glossary" that a photographer must know to excel in his/her craft, thank you!🙏😇🙏*

  • @bizpixvegas7651
    @bizpixvegas7651 Před 11 měsíci +1

    Great video Alex. Love the subjects you cover.
    I am a big fan of Cartier-Bresson. Back in my brief wedding photography days, I shot candid, "decisive" moments and had fun doing it. Then, I came across a few pros who tried to show me the way and told me those photos do not sell and to shoot photos that sell! That was year 2004. I left the wedding world in 2007 and never went back. Fast forward to 2023, the photographers who charge the big bucks so to speak all shoot decisive moment style. Go figure!
    I do landscape photography now but whenever I get a chance to shoot none landscape work, I look for the decisive moment. When I shot weddings, I had a following. They came to me for my decisive moment work not my "say cheese" stuff!!

  • @barnseyb6031
    @barnseyb6031 Před 7 měsíci

    Love this video Alex. Your own photos are amazing. ❤

  • @mvw5721
    @mvw5721 Před 11 měsíci +18

    Henri himself disliked 'the decisive moment'. Indeed, his contact sheets show that his great images required him to 'work the scene', taking multiple photos of the same scene at different angles, moments and perspectives. He hustled hard to get the desired shots and he would spend a lot of time with his contact sheets, determining which photos he decided were his 'best'. Henri: "Sometimes you have to milk the cow a lot to get a little bit of cheese.”

    • @barnseyb6031
      @barnseyb6031 Před 7 měsíci +2

      I like your comment. I think we are sometimes led to believe that the "decisive moment" is where someone takes a single photo just at the right time. In reality, it is often a photo (chosen from many photos) when the ideal moment occurred. (As you mentioned about Henri and his contact sheets)

    • @unstanic
      @unstanic Před 6 měsíci

      @@barnseyb6031 Especially those with groups of people starring at you. As everybody knows, in a single shot of a group of people someone will have their eyes closed lol

    • @epinhervin9355
      @epinhervin9355 Před 5 měsíci +1

      But if HCB got more than hundred decisive moment it mean he like it eventhough he did not admit it or just joking when he said he hate it 😂

  • @tedbrown7908
    @tedbrown7908 Před 11 měsíci +1

    The Saying is - an iron fist in a velvet glove. Your Version is a better fit for photography. I did my first real street photography yesterday and it felt good. It was at a street festival and people knew I was there with my big lens, and it didn't bother them. A 50ish guy tried to make faces in front of my lens and I had my finger on the shutter button, I fired away. His wife and family started laughing at him because I caught him in the moment. I wasn't even looking through the viewfinder. Post processing showed I nailed the picture of his face and smile.

  • @GJSsongsmith
    @GJSsongsmith Před 11 měsíci

    The “ nail varnish “ shot is genus !

  • @uwetrenkner9716
    @uwetrenkner9716 Před 11 měsíci

    Your wedding images are amazing!

  • @gainde1137
    @gainde1137 Před 11 měsíci +1

    It's all about observation and anticipation.

  • @KRE808
    @KRE808 Před 11 měsíci +1

    Lots of great points but the last really resonated with me. I’ve never understood photographers walking the streets with headphones or earbuds in, one of my main no-nos since I think it’s essential to be fully invested in what is happening around you (and for keeping oneself safe as well), but until you mentioned it I didn’t realize that yes, hearing what’s going on (and what might be about to go on) is also crucial…. Always love how you are able to talk about photography philosophically but never pretentiously!

  • @ThePhotographicEye
    @ThePhotographicEye  Před 11 měsíci +5

    📸 The Authentic Vision Framework: Feeling creatively blocked? Reignite your passion with this proven system, trusted by 1000's of photographers worldwide to help them find their unique voice in photography. Join me here: bit.ly/45Z1KzU

  • @gsx-phantom645
    @gsx-phantom645 Před 11 měsíci

    One of your best videos to date...

  • @johnclay7644
    @johnclay7644 Před 11 měsíci +1

    informatiive video on the decisive moment concept, Don McCullin (war photography) is another great example informative photo content.

  • @tomofbasel
    @tomofbasel Před 11 měsíci

    Thx so much for the Cartier-Bresson presentation! Enjoyed it and took many inputs away with me.

  • @clausmannsperger4432
    @clausmannsperger4432 Před 11 měsíci

    That‘s what it‘s all about! Thank you so much for this Video, it helped me alot, to find my way with it

  • @brandonmartinezstudio
    @brandonmartinezstudio Před 11 měsíci

    A symphony of elements - Thank you, this is beautiful

  • @ChetanDodwad
    @ChetanDodwad Před 11 měsíci

    Wonderful explanation. Thank you so much

  • @docDeutschmann
    @docDeutschmann Před 11 měsíci +2

    Thank you for this inspirational (and at the same time very instructional) video.
    However, it made me think about HCB's approach, and now I see even more clearly why a Leica was his choice of tool.
    Besides being small and of great quality, once it is setup (aperture, exposure, focus by scale, or by an object where he was anticipating the action to take place) it will release the shutter immediately. "Luck is where opportunity and preparation meet." ;-)

  • @Rob.1340
    @Rob.1340 Před 11 měsíci

    Thank you. All the best. 👍📷😎

  • @tedphillips2951
    @tedphillips2951 Před 11 měsíci

    Wonderful video! Thanks

  • @TheUrbandilema
    @TheUrbandilema Před 11 měsíci

    Very tru henri was a great master...henri wife also is an awesome photographer..the decisive moment to me is part of osberving the human presence..when i go the street i observe the people as well as the light..great topic sir and have a great Sunday

  • @nathan.dunahoo
    @nathan.dunahoo Před 11 měsíci

    Love the content as always, thank you!

  • @rgarlinyc
    @rgarlinyc Před 11 měsíci

    Very insightful, very encouraging - very helpful. Thank you immensely.

  • @glen-kun
    @glen-kun Před 10 měsíci +1

    I really enjoy your channel, and loved this video. I am not a photographer but do the social media for my bakery, and I find I am constantly hunting for moments to capture, but always frustrated as I would need to bake at the same time, and coworkers sometimes get frustrated when I pause to take photos or videos. This video taught me the important of thinking of the ways I could set up beforehand to minimize distraction and maximize my chances for great images or videos!

  • @Poppycockify
    @Poppycockify Před 10 měsíci

    Fantastic video, Alex. Love that shot of the lady-obscured by a curtain with just one heel visible-walking into the guy’s office. So suggestive ❤

  • @ShaneBaker
    @ShaneBaker Před 11 měsíci +2

    To my mind, the master of the decisive moment is HC-B's fellow Magnum photographer, Elliott Erwitt. That man's awareness and anticipation (of people and animals) is a super power!

    • @gurnbass
      @gurnbass Před 11 měsíci

      Erwitt‘s „Museum Watching“ is one of my favorite books; it shows his mastery of the decisive moment.

    • @BrunoChalifour
      @BrunoChalifour Před 9 měsíci

      Most Magnum photographers will meet such criteria too.

  • @ChrisHunt4497
    @ChrisHunt4497 Před 11 měsíci

    Use your ears - you are so right. So underused. Thank you Alex for another masterclass. ❤

  • @johna.benigno4172
    @johna.benigno4172 Před 11 měsíci +1

    Hello Alex. Once again, a well thought out presentation about Bresson's work. As a photography teacher, I'm often asked to define "the decisive moment". Over the years, I've come up with a definition to start the discussion. The decisive moment is when time and space combine to capture a significant action. Then, we talk and talk and talk, and then talk some more. Feel free to use this if you think it helps the discussion.

    • @BrunoChalifour
      @BrunoChalifour Před 9 měsíci

      Just read the introduction to "the Decisive Moment and you'll get a good if not better definition, "the alignment of eye, mind and heart." Look at the Greek term Kairos. There is no use to water down one's ideas just quote them.

  • @nadominhoca
    @nadominhoca Před 11 měsíci

    I REALLY like your videos. You know what you are talking about.

  • @sionkaze
    @sionkaze Před 11 měsíci

    That's awesome that you offer mentoring. I would love more info regarding this

  • @raysville7256
    @raysville7256 Před 11 měsíci

    Xcellent content.

  • @NoosaHeads
    @NoosaHeads Před 11 měsíci

    Good presentation. Very inspiring. Karsh of Ottawa and Henri Bresson are my most revered photographers.

  • @VagabondKing100
    @VagabondKing100 Před 11 měsíci

    Thank you for this video. It helped solidify some thoughts I’ve had recently. If I can try and restate your idea:
    The Decisive Moment is a combination of emotional & intellectual presence and intention inside an experience based feedback loop that is layered on a foundation of technical competence.
    I’ve taught three photographers over the last couple months how to do my job. One of the best comments was “oh wow, you really put a lot of thought into this.” A whole lot of what I do is solely based on how I have learned to look at the available light and how I position myself and the object to be photographed. I watch the weather and clouds like a hawk. It is all done on purpose. It is the exact opposite of just running around taking quick snapshots.

    • @BrunoChalifour
      @BrunoChalifour Před 9 měsíci

      Why give a lamer definition of HCB's photographing strategy when he explained it all eloquently in his introduction of "The Decisive Moment"? It is not just about "spontenaety" (the way spontaneity is butchered in the video) but yes, the mind and the eye and the heart.

  • @nikytamayo
    @nikytamayo Před 11 měsíci

    I've always felt that a musical background made one a better writer. Never thought about it applied to photography.

  • @Hirsutechin
    @Hirsutechin Před 8 měsíci

    Something to also consider is HCB’s love of Surrealism and how many of his compositions borrow from it. I had a very enjoyable read through “The Europeans” recently and apart from his Puckish sense of fun in so many images, the surrealism was unmistakable in many.
    Some excellent images of your own in the video too! ❤

  • @ntlopes1
    @ntlopes1 Před 11 měsíci +1

    I really like your excellent work. Congratulations! Please don't stop or give up. Your videos are great and very enlightening. Thanks.
    Bresson was a friend and frequented the members and actions of the French Surrialist Movement (his friendship with Breton and with Giacometti is known). Do you know what the "hasard objectif" technique is? Well, that's "the Decisive Moment"... If you read all the «"technical"» texts about the movement's poetic creativity, you'll quickly find the "technique" of the Hasard objectif/decisive Moment... (The work André Breton's "Nadja" was made with the application of some «surrielist techniques», one of them was Le Hasard Objectif. Decisive Moment is Bresson's photographic version of l'hasard objectif). It is not a demerit, quite the contrary! Only a visual poet like Bresson would have the ability to carry out this «translation».

  • @guusbeeld
    @guusbeeld Před 11 měsíci

    Man, do I love your thoughts about Photography...

  • @seaeagles6025
    @seaeagles6025 Před 11 měsíci +1

    Hi Alex, Thanks for sharing your Black and White photos they were very natural, and they are the best photos. When your subject doesn't know your taking their photo and the photo turns out great, that's a skill, and you have that great skill Alex. When i go out photographing i never think of the decisive moment, i know what it is but now you have inspired me to be ready, patient, and waiting for the decisive moment. Liked when you said, you want the decisive moment to land like a Butterfly. Thank you for this great video. 😃

  • @nocommentnoname1111
    @nocommentnoname1111 Před 7 měsíci

    The DM is something that you can talk about but cannot really teach. It is instinctive and it comes from the soul. You can talk about it theoretically all you want but ultimately you either got it or you don't.

  • @kamaur01
    @kamaur01 Před 11 měsíci

    Bresson made me want to learn photography

  • @andrewcroft2570
    @andrewcroft2570 Před 10 měsíci

    Great video Alex, Henri Cartier Bresson takes some stunning pictures, I know that wedding photography is a completely different genre but you take some exceptional pictures yourself.

  • @Mandibil
    @Mandibil Před 6 měsíci

    The decisive moment imo ... is about not thinking that you should necessarily take the shot as soon that you get a notion of a scene coming together ... it is about having a sense of the scenes potential but wait until its full potential has unfolded and THEN you have the decisive moment. It may not occur ... but if it does, that is when magic happens

  • @deckmiller3652
    @deckmiller3652 Před 11 měsíci

    There's this lecture by Agnes Sire (Director of HCB Foundation) about how Cartier-Bresson got tired of the decisive moment and felt trapped by the term he never really coined. The decisive moment is not even the English translation of the title of his book.

    • @BrunoChalifour
      @BrunoChalifour Před 9 měsíci

      True but it is also at the beginning of the book. It is the quote by Cardinal de Retz at the top of the introduction to the book by Cartier-Bresson himself. And that is why Simon not & Schuster used it rather than a lame translation of Images à la sauvette... and it was not such a bad idea as the expression stuck.

  • @veivoli
    @veivoli Před 11 měsíci

    One of images in this video included the word "spontaneity." I recall listening to a Peter, Paul, and Mary concert many years ago where one of them (a bloke, so it wasn't Mary (and the more I think about it, I believe it was Peter Yarrow - but it was a long time ago)) was organising the theatre in to three groups to sing a round, which I seem to recall was "Rock my Soul in the Bosom of Abraham."
    He said something I've never forgotten, and am probably misquoting: "If you want spontaneity you have to rehearse."
    I referred to the quote attributed to Seneca the Younger regarding luck in a reply to another poster...

  • @litoco
    @litoco Před 11 měsíci

    Tak!

  • @alstuart8801
    @alstuart8801 Před 11 měsíci

    nice video

  • @Mryves13
    @Mryves13 Před 11 měsíci

    ❤❤❤

  • @ThePurpleHarpoon
    @ThePurpleHarpoon Před 11 měsíci

    At 14:47
    Bresson should have shot those two young dudes in portrait orientation.
    Now I have to imagine how cool their trousers and shoes looked.

  • @ysabelledurant
    @ysabelledurant Před 11 měsíci

    Another great episode. Just do not agree to the fact that "luck" is not really a crucial part of it. the Ls (Light, Location, Luck) are but yet, the decisive moment is too

  • @Daniel_Ilyich
    @Daniel_Ilyich Před 11 měsíci

    Mr. Kilbee, really great wedding photographs. They transcend just documenting an event. You captured such a wide array of emotions and lovely little intimate moments, all the while, crafting some very good compositions. They didn't mind receiving the images in Black and White? I imagine not everyone can appreciate the beauty of B&W imagery.

  • @boatman222345
    @boatman222345 Před 10 měsíci

    Excellent video both thought provoking and challenging! Today's spray and pray style of photography would not have been possible in HCB's time because the available technology would not have allowed it. In that HCB enjoyed a real advantage over photographers today. Lost somewhere amidst the never ending succession of auto features and multiple frames per second is the somewhat intangible but nonetheless all important satisfaction of being sufficiently in tune with the moments of life so as to be able to capture in a single image both the process leading up to as well as the actual "moment" somehow defining the essence of the event. There is a world of difference between holding down the shutter button for 5 seconds and 50 frames and then selecting the best frame and standing quietly in keen anticipation of the decisive moment and confidently pressing the shutter button when it happens.

    • @BrunoChalifour
      @BrunoChalifour Před 9 měsíci

      Wrong about the technology (a 350-shot roll of film in a Leica existed in post WW II years0 ; many camera manufacturer added motors-drives to their camera bodies. The issue was more cost. Even today not everyone "sprays and prays". Usually it is a youth issue, trying to compensate a lack of understanding, mastering and practice of he medium with "spraying" which may result in missing the right shot by the way. And I am not even mentioning the time wasted editing, and the memory space lost.

    • @boatman222345
      @boatman222345 Před 9 měsíci

      @@BrunoChalifour By "available technology" I was referring to the cost of film and developing. I had a camera equipped with a motor drive years ago but the only way I would have been able to afford to spray and pray was if I worked for the government!

  • @ChoppersModelworks
    @ChoppersModelworks Před 11 měsíci

    Other less mentioned photographers are also interesting to look into sometimes. Such as Julia Margaret Cameron and Lewis Carroll.

    • @BrunoChalifour
      @BrunoChalifour Před 9 měsíci

      You'll have a problem using them to illustrate the "Decisive Moment". ;o)

  • @youevil9846
    @youevil9846 Před 11 měsíci +1

    Nowadays it is harder to walk around and wait for the precise moment. Back in the days people were excited to see a camera with the possibility of being part of photographic memory. Modern human beings are so self conscious that they do not appreciate being part of a photo,. Cellphones are everywhere and everyone is taking selfies.

  • @johnmoody2365
    @johnmoody2365 Před 11 měsíci

    I certainly agree that many people that call themselves a 'street photographer', which includes most of those served up by the algorithm with snare drum dominated musac, actually walk around urban areas clicking aimlessly anything in sight. Accepting HCB may not have got the shot through careful timing of a single frame, but still likely only a few, the use of film with a finite number of frames definitely concentrates the mind to make every frame count. Now with digital cameras, that restriction is essentially lifted and as you say these 'street photographers' capture anything and everything in the hope they get lucky.

    • @BrunoChalifour
      @BrunoChalifour Před 9 měsíci

      The tool is not enough to change the way a photographer works. The difference in training, experience may as what matters is the way the tools are being used and that is the photographer's responsibility. Having moved from decades of film to two decades of digital cameras now, my own practice has not change, nor have the practices of many photographers I know. Let us look at the most used camera these days, smartphones... people do not take twenty shots of the same scene either.

  • @robertmccutchan5450
    @robertmccutchan5450 Před 11 měsíci +1

    Alex, what are your thoughts on doing multiple shot bursts? My method is to find my composition, wait for the "decisive moment", and then I usually take a 2 or 3 shot burst of that moment, or maybe more if there is a LOT of action going on. I seem to have more good pictures to choose from this way.
    I'm NOT a fan of the "spray and pray" method, and I think there is no substitute for learning composition, and waiting for the right right moment within that composition.

    • @AA-ni3km
      @AA-ni3km Před 11 měsíci +1

      I was going to say the same thing. If you've been waiting for a moment - and it happens - why risk missing the moment by taking a single shot (and mis-timing that single shot by 0.2s)? Take shots at 5+ FPS and make sure you don't miss the moment.
      Also, you don't know in advance which precise moment will be best. Is it the foot hovering above the water or the foot just entering the water? Answer: Take both and decide later.
      I suggest not wasting time wondering about purity in your process - do what it takes to get the shot.

    • @DanScott1
      @DanScott1 Před 11 měsíci

      If your spraying, your not connected, there's only one image coming to you.. are you ready?

  • @r.c8756
    @r.c8756 Před 11 měsíci +1

    The only problem with that idea of "right moment" is that as a newbie, you haven’t developped that instinct of when the right moment is and therefore you may very well wait forever and never take any photos at all. No matter how good the advice, I can’t help but thinking you can’t get it right without getting it wrong a lot before. I think, maybe you NEED to "machinegun" a lot and take a lot of disappointing images before having enough experience to have at least a slight idea of what it is you’re looking for. Well, I guess maybe some people get it faster and more naturally than others, for whom it’s a whole process...
    BTW I love the idea of using ears to make photos, that’s such an interesting take.

    • @rogerbradbury9713
      @rogerbradbury9713 Před 11 měsíci +1

      Yes, it requires practise; lots and lots of practise, like any skill. But you will not learn if you just machine gun (AKA spray and pray); if that's all you ever do, you will never learn to recognise the right moment. You may get a photo that's caught the right moment, but you will have no idea how to do it again. Instead, take plenty of photos but make every single one count. Then you will learn how to do it.

    • @BrunoChalifour
      @BrunoChalifour Před 9 měsíci

      "Machinegunning" is definitely not the solution as it implies quantity but not quality. Regular if not constant thoughtful practice does help though.

  • @robertbridges4686
    @robertbridges4686 Před 10 měsíci

    Bresson danced

  • @mikefoster6018
    @mikefoster6018 Před 7 měsíci

    I feel like Bresson, Robert Doisneux and other greats distinguish themselves massively from middle-of-the road street photography by ensuring enough story or meaning in those photos.
    There's enough to ensure you have something to digest, with a determination to about confusing imagery that would block the emotional response. And the meaning is subtle, sometimes humorous, and non-didactic.

  • @user-pl6cb5hi9x
    @user-pl6cb5hi9x Před 10 měsíci

    Perhaps someone can find documentation that Henri Cartier-Bresson actually said the quote attributed to him: “The decisive moment”?

  • @tonebonetones
    @tonebonetones Před 10 měsíci

    I think, however, it is also an extra dimension of difficulty, today. Not just being ready for that moment, but increased privacy and paranoia make it difficult to shoot off the cuff, close enough to catch people unguarded.
    In Bresson's time, photography was still a novelty and an old man taking pictures would not cause any paranoia from the subjects.

    • @BrunoChalifour
      @BrunoChalifour Před 9 měsíci

      Not quite a novelty as the illustrated press was quite vibrant and most people had family pictures (by the way he died in 2004 and professionally photographed until the late 1970s). As for paranoia whenever he went to the USSR or China, he was closely supervised; in the remote countryside of the world people would also look at you suspiciously. There are so many smart-phones around now that even museum guards do not bother asking you not to take photographs.

  • @JerryNovak
    @JerryNovak Před 11 měsíci

    Preparing for The Decisive Moment is important. Frame your shot. Set the aperture and shutter speed for the conditions. Do you need everything in focus? Do you need to stop motion? Decide how you are going to make the shot before the composition becomes perfect. Once you are ready, THEN you just look for the decisive moment and shoot it.

  • @lukjs5239
    @lukjs5239 Před 11 měsíci

    Great video, thanks. Cartier Bresson should be one of the pillar of everybody's photographic path. (P.S. would it be possible to add in description the music you use in your video?🙏)

  • @stevemphoto
    @stevemphoto Před 11 měsíci

    I know that subway station you are speaking of :)

    • @ThePhotographicEye
      @ThePhotographicEye  Před 11 měsíci

      You sure do Steve! Have you been back there at all?

    • @stevemphoto
      @stevemphoto Před 11 měsíci

      @@ThePhotographicEye Not really. However, I did walk by it the other day while dropping of some film. I've been thinking differently about my photography as a whole.

  • @Call_Me_Mom
    @Call_Me_Mom Před 11 měsíci

    An-time-cipation

  • @hurleygreen927
    @hurleygreen927 Před 11 měsíci

    FOLLOWUP COMMENTS: His photos all seem to be shot in 50mm format...is that true? And to me, what makes his images so great is that they almost look set up and sometimeds POSED! :) I LUV IT!

  • @sputumtube
    @sputumtube Před 11 měsíci

    Cartier Bresson was a very gifted photographer and a brave man who was captured by the Germans in WW2 not just once, but twice. He escaped both times. His family were also very wealthy which meant that he could follow his passion and get paid for it. He never developed or printed his own images which left him free to snap away with abandon. His 'hit rate' was less than 1 in 10, so 90% of his images were discarded. We only see his best work, and his book The Decisive Moment are a collection of this 10%. A founder member of Magnum, but still a fallible man.

  • @findingselfagain4014
    @findingselfagain4014 Před 11 měsíci

    Yes hunting is the thing, one must be prepared all the time Cartier used a 24mm on a range finder he made himself invisable. I knew one of his agency shooters Brian Brake, he would say things are predictable. My thing is to expect an image to happen the secret is to predict it to happen.

  • @PhotoArtBrussels
    @PhotoArtBrussels Před 5 měsíci

    Hi Alex, irrespective of the concept of making a photograph; these days we are confronted with the rights of the subject. What is you input on handling the modern day street photography challenge?
    Certainly here in de EU we need a written approval for publication of any photo by the subject(s) in it; and there is the right of portrait, people can change their minds when they want to.

  • @CoffeeandPhotographyTalk
    @CoffeeandPhotographyTalk Před 11 měsíci

    Ok, I tried to look up the work 'unboringed' from your thumbnail and I can't find a definition?🤔

    • @c.augustin
      @c.augustin Před 11 měsíci +1

      Creative freedom in playing with the English language.

    • @CoffeeandPhotographyTalk
      @CoffeeandPhotographyTalk Před 11 měsíci

      @@c.augustin 🤣. I was just curious what was meant!

    • @c.augustin
      @c.augustin Před 11 měsíci +1

      @@CoffeeandPhotographyTalk Oh, that's easy for a non-native speaker/reader like me: boring - unboring (negated) - unboringed (make a verb out of an adjective). I have to admit that this is not meant to be in the dictionary, but I guess this is how languages evolve … 😁 (As a German I might be familiar with creating new words - we do it by combining them into monsters … 😁)

    • @yeohi
      @yeohi Před 11 měsíci

      @@c.augustin unbored

    • @CoffeeandPhotographyTalk
      @CoffeeandPhotographyTalk Před 11 měsíci

      @@c.augustin understood - I took some german in high school, monsters indeed! LOL

  • @angelamaloney4871
    @angelamaloney4871 Před 11 měsíci

    Sounds like the decisive moment is another way of describing an important street photography technique-standing around and waiting for something to happen. Find a good spot and just hang around to see what happens. :-)
    No books ordered. I have several of Henri Cartier-Bresson’s work and am fairly familiar with it.

    • @BrunoChalifour
      @BrunoChalifour Před 9 měsíci

      What other street photography techniques are there to produce interesting if not good street photographs?

    • @angelamaloney4871
      @angelamaloney4871 Před 9 měsíci

      @@BrunoChalifour There are as many techniques as there are street photographers. Look at Bruce Gilden for an example of someone quite different from Cartier-Bresson. Albeit not someone I’d likely emulate.

    • @BrunoChalifour
      @BrunoChalifour Před 9 měsíci

      @@angelamaloney4871 Neither would I!!! But let us face it you are referring to an obnoxious extreme whose technique has more to do with agressive and again obnoxious portraiture (granted in the street) than the street photography. The environment (the street) matters very little in his portrait. You could describe it "another way of describing" portraiture ;o)

    • @angelamaloney4871
      @angelamaloney4871 Před 9 měsíci

      @@BrunoChalifour Well, I'm afraid I'm just not into the whole gatekeeping thing where we make up rigid rules for a genre and include/exclude based on them. Bruce Gilden is pretty widely recognized as a street photographer, but you're certainly welcome to disagree. Which would, of course, do nothing to address your original question.

    • @BrunoChalifour
      @BrunoChalifour Před 9 měsíci

      @@angelamaloney4871 Well so to go back to my original question, what other street photography technique do you know? If everyone has one then there should be plenty of options other than Bruce Gilden (by the way Hitler is a very recognised name too but do we need another one? In other one being known may not be enough to be interesting or good).

  • @itakephotos1141
    @itakephotos1141 Před 11 měsíci

    But I fear interrupting that decisive moment and then it is gone, or worse I'm invasive.

  • @barrytcook1
    @barrytcook1 Před 11 měsíci

    you are dead right .... no luck to the decisive moment ....the more I practice the luckier i get ....arnole palmer ...gary player ... not sure who said it ...but so so true ...

  • @yeohi
    @yeohi Před 11 měsíci

    The composition is a critical part of the decisive moment. Sadly, you don't talk specifically about the composition of any of the photos. How come?

    • @klartext2225
      @klartext2225 Před 11 měsíci

      Since HCB never used zooms - he "zoomed" with his feet, I think composition always came very automatic to him, he had to be fast and when you are trained, you find your framing in one second. Because often there are not so many good options for framing a scene with a 40 mm lens.

  • @bdf8762
    @bdf8762 Před 8 měsíci

    Why ? To redo what has already been done and probably worse... ?

  • @RustyKnorr
    @RustyKnorr Před 11 měsíci +1

    The decisive moment was total BS. If you look at his contact sheets he shot as many shots as anyone else trying to get the right timing. It’s not like he magically only took one frame of each composition. He was a great photographer, not a wizard. I think Elliot Erwitt was just as amazing if not more so at capturing the once in a lifetime timing that made the shot.

  • @saalikreynolds3064
    @saalikreynolds3064 Před 11 měsíci

    Sorry, I don't get it. I believe Cartier-Bresson is over-praised.