Street: People, Places, and Things - Kenneth Hines


Details
***Weather Update 3/7/2025***
As of today, the weather forecast calls for 40 - 20 percentage chances of rain during our walk window and a daily chance of 85% with a prediction of just less than an inch for the day.
Based on this I will continue with the walk; however, if this is outside your tolerance of weather for you or your camera, please change your RSVP to not going.
If you are going, I recommend a rain jacket and possibly an umbrella. If you are a camera umbrella user, I suggest bringing and using it as well.
If the rain presents opportunities or inhibits our shooting we may change the stops and areas of town we cover.
***
This month we will be considering the photography and approach of Kenneth Hines, a Zeis Ambassador, photographer, and educator:
15:30 - 27:00 in this video:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=jhNgMP4CU4o&list=PLyvuS7237e79SQryIrkDXO3uMqKSopHm7
This video:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Dyf2WDPttko
A day with me:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=F6faG4l0SqE
7 Ways to get better at street photography:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=wlYpq6fYnSo
We will meet up at 2:00 pm at the Dart Train station and proceed to Deep Ellum. For those wanting to meetup us at Deep Ellum, please meet us at the Deep Ellum station at 3:00.
For those wanting to work from a shot list, here are 10 objectives to try while photographing people on the street:
- Find Natural Frames - Look for architectural elements like doorways, windows, or arches that can frame your subject naturally. This creates depth and draws attention to your subject while providing context about their environment.
- Master the Rule of Thirds - Position key elements of your subject (especially eyes) at the intersection points of a 3×3 grid. This creates more dynamic and engaging portraits than centered compositions.
- Incorporate Leading Lines - Use streets, sidewalks, railings, or other linear elements to guide the viewer's eye directly to your subject. These lines create visual pathways that enhance the composition's flow.
- Create Depth with Layers - Include foreground, middle ground, and background elements in your composition. For example, shoot through a crowd to capture someone interesting in the distance, creating a sense of place and dimension.
- Balance Negative Space - Experiment with leaving empty space around your subject. This can emphasize their isolation or create a minimalist aesthetic that highlights their presence in an uncluttered way.
- Capture Gesture and Movement - Focus on documenting expressive hand movements, distinctive walking styles, or other physical actions that reveal personality and create dynamic visual interest.
- Work with Environmental Context - Include elements of the surroundings that tell a story about the subject. The relationship between person and place often creates the most compelling street portraits.
- Find Color Harmony - Look for subjects wearing colors that either contrast dramatically or harmonize beautifully with their surroundings. Color relationships can transform an ordinary scene into something visually striking.
- Play with Scale - Create compositions that emphasize the relationship between your subject and larger elements in the environment. A small figure against a massive building creates tension and visual interest.
- Seek Juxtaposition - Look for contradictory elements within the same frame—youth and age, wealth and poverty, natural and artificial. These contrasts create visual tension and often communicate deeper social narratives.


Canceled
Every 2nd Saturday of the month until December 31, 2025
Street: People, Places, and Things - Kenneth Hines