About us
Welcome to the Kowloon Street Photography Group!
This group is for street photography enthusiasts or anyone with an interest in capturing the culture of the area. Join us for photowalk assignments and connect with like-minded individuals who share your passion for photography. We will hopefully challenge your photographic chops while we learn from each other and explore the area.
Whether you're a beginner looking to learn new techniques or a seasoned pro wanting to explore this genre, this group is for you. We'll create assignments for each outing in the Kowloon area, some by perspective, some by theme—all designed to inspire to get out to shoot. (This group is a reincarnation of the YTM Street group.)
Any camera will do; gear isn't important. That said, a camera with adjustable settings will provide more control and a fuller involvement than a phone. Our goal is to make interesting images with good composition, with more importance to line, form and texture than megapixels. Sharpness is a bourgeoisie concept anyway.
Please also join us for friendly conversations and possibly pertinent discussions after each shoot. Then, the group would love to see your work and request that you post 5-7 images (dependent upon turnout) to the Event page. To post, you might need to navigate to Past Events and find Add Photos. Constructive critiques and content comments on images posted are encouraged.
Note that if you sign up but don't show up two times—strictly enforced when there is a wait list—you will be removed from the group. Cancelling within 3 hours will be marked as "no show"—that doesn't leave time for those on a waitlist to attend—again, strictly enforced when there is a waitlist.
Let's explore the vibrant streets of this area through the lens of our cameras and create some stunning images.
Upcoming events
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A Taste of the Street: Foodies
Aeon, 56 Dundas Street, Mong Kok, Mong Kok, CNThis week, we’re focusing on foodies — not just food, but the entire scene around it.
Think of the street as a living menu: people eating on the street, restaurant queues, vendors preparing food, people choosing what to eat from street menus, friends sharing snacks, someone eating alone, or the messes left behind. Food is personal, social, cultural — and it’s everywhere.
Your goal is to photograph moments with gestures, textures, expressions, and choices. Photo the menus or the decor, the patrons or the suppliers. You don't have to shoot people—shoot things if you want. Walk through the crowd with a 21mm if you're comfortable, maybe walk it again with something longer—it's your comfort level and goal here.
What to Look For:
- Vendors at work — grilling, stirring, chopping, plating
- Customers making decisions — reading menus, pointing, hesitating
- People eating — joy, satisfaction, hunger, or even disappointment. Maybe it's just messy.
- The queues! — really, who waits like this?
- Hands and details — passing food, seasoning, holding a bite mid-air, stuff on a stick or plate
- Food presentation — colorful dishes, messy wrappers, half-eaten plates
- Cultural context — small sidewalk eateries and storefronts, local diners (Korean, Japanese) street carts, the wet market
- Social dynamics — who eats with whom, who prepares, who waits
This is not about just food photography — it’s about capturing the relationship with food—from a wet market on Yin Chong Street, to eating on Dundas.
Your Mission:
- Look for moments of interaction — between people and food, or between people through food
- Get close — textures and expressions matter
- Be in the crowd, or spy from a distance
- Check out the date scene while couples talk
- Capture decisions and reactions — curiosity, craving, satisfaction
- Don’t forget the environment — signs, carts, the person at the door or counter
Food is one of the most universal human experiences. Let’s see what taste looks like on these streets — raw, real, and delicious.
We will meet at the end of Sai Yeung Choi at Dundas, between Aeon and the park. 3pm.
There are dozens and dozens of street food venues along Dundas all the way to Fa Yuen (don't forget Tung Choi Street—behind both sides of the Ladies Market), to Soy. Theres not much north of Soy but there's good hunting east and west.
There's a map of the suggested area to cover. Theres a wet market on Yin Chong indicated as well. Take any path to cover this area, or choose another area—up to you. Go to Nathan, just be sure to meetup again at 4:30.
Regroup at 4:30pm: J.Moon, Pakpolee Commercial Centre
Address: Unit 410-411, 4/F, Pakpolee Commercial Centre, 1A Sai Yeung Choi St S, Mong KokPlease stay a while to share your experience, thoughts, and maybe some images while grabbing a drink (or more).
After all this:
Please post 5-10 of your images from the shoot (depending upon turn-out). And PLEASE, be a participant in commenting on other images. Gut reactions and general comments are always welcome. Comments can be subject-related, but better are those that address image-making. It's part of the process and valuable for your fellow photographers.Remember to be considerate of a possible wait list, and be sure to mark "won't attend" at least 8 hours before the shoot if you sign up and need to drop.
10 attendees
Past events
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