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Garry Winogrand and his Crooked Horizon Lines [Street Photography Tips] (2018) 

Tavis Leaf Glover
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I'm curious. Who do you like better, Garry Winogrand or Steve McCurry? Let me know in the comments below and why.
Garry Winogrand has some very crooked horizon lines in his street photography, but does that mean he should straighten them? We'll find out why not in the video! I think he's got a great eye and captures some very spontaneous moments. Garry Winogrand was a very prolific shooter and shot millions of photos...literally millions! Within the video you'll see clips of awesome documentaries showing his shooting style. It's really hilarious to me. I've adopted this technique in my own street photography and it works perfect every time.
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Some topics covered:
Garry Winogrand
Street photography
film photography
documentary
prolific shooter
crooked horizon line
cropping
spontaneity
tips
techniques

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9 янв 2018

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Комментарии : 221   
@AdamCzarnowski
@AdamCzarnowski 9 месяцев назад
Winogrand was a genius. Anybody who has tried to do street will know how impossibly difficult his effortless elegance and brilliance is to achieve.
@jerryzeidenberg6736
@jerryzeidenberg6736 Год назад
The angled horizons and lines in Garry Winograd's work contribute a lot to the energy in his photos, something he is well-known for. We see this when you leveled the horizons in the video -- suddenly, the pictures look much more calm and sedate. I think he knew what he was doing, and they weren't just random shots taken too quickly. He was after a feeling, and he got it! Very good video Tavis, I enjoyed it!
@IPOXstudios
@IPOXstudios Год назад
Thanks for watching and sharing your thoughts!
@chefurka
@chefurka 4 года назад
For me, straightening a horizon in post/darkroom has a very different effect than endeavouring to straighten it at the moment of exposure. The former is an aesthetic choice that depends on the image. Doing the latter enforces a formalism on the image that can make it feel more static - it takes an extra effort (and time!) that isn't related to the subject, so it automatically reduces the spontaneity. I've been guilty of enforcing straight horizons for 50 years. After watching your video, this insight may help improve my spontaneity in the time I have left. It's never too late!
@tonykeyworth3522
@tonykeyworth3522 4 года назад
Straighten/not straighten for me depends on personal choice based on the look and context of a particular image. Main reason Winograd's shots look spontaneous is that his whole approach is about spontaneity - zone focused prime lens, making shots on the move, in and amongst his subjects. The crooked horizons are a symptom of that overall spontaneity although I'm sure there is more deliberation on Winograd's part than sometimes appear to be the case.
@IPOXstudios
@IPOXstudios 4 года назад
Tony Keyworth thanks for watching and sharing your thoughts!
@MileyonDisney
@MileyonDisney 6 лет назад
It was hilarious watching him fiddle with his camera and his glasses - pretty slick!
@IPOXstudios
@IPOXstudios 6 лет назад
I agree, he's pretty entertaining to watch! Take care!
@IPOXstudios
@IPOXstudios 5 лет назад
Doin' The Pigeon thanks for watching, I’m glad you enjoyed the video!
@alexlee3227
@alexlee3227 8 месяцев назад
I've been straightening a lot of my images but, after watching this very interesting video, I will certainly be going back to which ones might be better if I leave them as they were took in the moment. As for cropping; I do think something we shouldn't be afraid to crop but I also try not to do it unless it's necessary. Getting everything right in camera is something I'm training myself to do. I'm currently using a 28mm focal lenght 95% of the time, so seeing how GW used it is a good education for me. Great video!
@gottanikoncamera
@gottanikoncamera 4 года назад
I think the slanted horizon, I think slanted sounds more purposeful than crooked, funnels our vision towards the point of interest and out of the frame. It works. Love your back flip shot.
@error60091
@error60091 2 года назад
First, thanks a lot for your channel, your books and discussions on gestalt principles... a true and hidden gem... as for cropping, I personally try to frame the shot as correctly as possible so that I don't have to crop later, but sometimes I and as I'm sure many others will realize that cropping sometimes may be necessary after the shutter's been clicked... HCB may have been a purist, but I think people should not limit themselves when it comes to cropping (at least the ones who are already well familiar with the rules)... also, one's vision/perception of the scene at the timing of shutter click and their vision for the image afterward may change as well, so I think it's fair and ok to leave cropping open as an option... in regards to Winogrand and his crooked horizons, I will say first that as some others have noted here that crooked horizons work in the sense that they pull the viewer's eye toward moving/active elements on either side of the frame, like a visual gravity or weight... I've also noticed this in your books where you show your original shot with a crooked horizon and the simulated/straightened version... some dynamism is lost when the horizon is corrected... finally, I wonder whether there may have been some natural causes involved with Winogrand's crooked horizon style... like, maybe because of his stance/the way he stands and the way he placed the camera against his face and just his general way of shooting... I mean I'm only speculating, but I say this because in my case, I love straight horizons and try my best to align the horizon when I click and the intent to have a straight horizon, but sometimes I still get a crooked horizon... this video made me realize all this
@BMRTV
@BMRTV 5 лет назад
Really enjoyed the analysis of photos to demonstrate the ideas.
@JosVerheijden
@JosVerheijden 6 лет назад
Thank you so much for this great analysis. What I espacialy like is when you straighten a horizon to show the difference. Most pictures that you showed lose their power with a straightend horizon.
@IPOXstudios
@IPOXstudios 6 лет назад
Thanks for watching and commenting! It's great to hear the things you liked in the video. I'll keep the videos coming, take care!
@Mitcheb4
@Mitcheb4 Год назад
Fantastic video! Thanks for the helpful overview of his style and comparing it to how you thought through your work as well. Cheers!
@IPOXstudios
@IPOXstudios Год назад
Thanks for watching!
@thegreenwoodelf8014
@thegreenwoodelf8014 9 месяцев назад
Thank you for bringing this photographer to my attention....😲... love your images 🙏🏻🙏🏻 I try and compose a non crop-worthy frame composition before I shoot. Like before digital images, when you had fewer window moments to frame stuff you were seeing
@k1773ns
@k1773ns 5 лет назад
i always straighten out my photos. but this is making me feel like, i should try not to care about that aspect as much especially in my street shots. thanks for the inspiration!
@IPOXstudios
@IPOXstudios 5 лет назад
k1773ns yeh try it out, I think you might be surprised. You’re welcome, thanks for watching!
@merlinmarquardt
@merlinmarquardt 3 года назад
Don’t see or understand why straightening spoils the esthetic.
@stanleyomar
@stanleyomar 5 лет назад
I saw a career-spanning Robert Frank exhibit last year where the were able to place negatives and contact sheets next to the final prints and he actually cropped a lot! I think the point should be to produce the most powerful image in the end, and you may not have to crop if you like all of the details in the scene, but I don't see anything wrong with shaving portions off an image if it helps you better focus what you found interesting when creating the photo.
@IPOXstudios
@IPOXstudios 5 лет назад
Kevin Jones thanks for watching and sharing your thoughts!
@elrafaga
@elrafaga 5 лет назад
THANKS for this video.I had no idea aboutthe crooked horizon. This is something I do a lot but on purpose. Never kenw why until I looked at a bunch of street pics I'd taken one day and realized I do it when I read there is danger or some kind of instability in the air.
@IPOXstudios
@IPOXstudios 5 лет назад
Rafael Edwards great to hear, thanks for sharing and watching 🙏🏼
@danishphoto
@danishphoto 5 лет назад
Great video, Tavis. This video made me understand a great bit more about Winogrand and his photos
@IPOXstudios
@IPOXstudios 5 лет назад
Daniel Hoffmann thanks for watching!
@uncanny_bassman
@uncanny_bassman 5 лет назад
Good topic, well made mini-documentary, 2 thumbs up!
@IPOXstudios
@IPOXstudios 5 лет назад
F.M. H. Great to hear, thanks for watching!
@deepujs
@deepujs 5 лет назад
useful points.. i have a tendency to crop the picture. But i will rethink on it now onwards.
@IPOXstudios
@IPOXstudios 5 лет назад
Deepu J.S. Best of luck, thanks for watching!
@jiminnewcastle
@jiminnewcastle 3 года назад
Very good; I learned from it.
@IPOXstudios
@IPOXstudios 3 года назад
Thanks for watching!
@jimijamsham
@jimijamsham 3 года назад
i always prefer vertical lines to be straight. I shoot so fast that i cant always get that however if i can in post and it still works. that is wonderful
@MamboFerido
@MamboFerido 4 года назад
I don't think the crooked horizon is his style but rather the result of photographing spontaneously. He's one of my favorite photographers.
@IPOXstudios
@IPOXstudios 4 года назад
Thanks for watching and sharing your thoughts! He’s one of the best!
@sLOMO_77
@sLOMO_77 3 года назад
Spontaneity and maybe world view/perception. Theres an anxiousness and chaotic nature present that reads too as movement even in stills. That with his fidgeting and some of what hes said in that documentary make me think this. Hes also a fav of mine.
@autistechlens8691
@autistechlens8691 3 года назад
Love this video bro! I see a lot of GW in how I shoot. The whacky moment, fiddling with the camera to get away with it etc.
@IPOXstudios
@IPOXstudios 3 года назад
He was awesome to watch in action! Thanks for the support!
@MrV2u
@MrV2u 5 лет назад
I’ve always straightened my images. Now after seeing this I doubt I would again. Great video brother.
@IPOXstudios
@IPOXstudios 5 лет назад
MrV2u good to hear, thanks for watching!
@ronaldquint
@ronaldquint 6 лет назад
I enjoy the different perspectives.
@IPOXstudios
@IPOXstudios 6 лет назад
Thank you!
@miks48
@miks48 5 лет назад
Ultimately, a great photo is first and foremost about its emotional impact, not about its geometry.
@thehishamahmad
@thehishamahmad 4 года назад
Nice one. Thanks! 👍🏻
@4NDR3190
@4NDR3190 5 лет назад
I always straighten my images, but I didn't know how to shoot like this. Yours and Garry's pictures give more dynamism to the pictures. I will start to shoot like this. Thank you for the video that inspired me a bit more.
@IPOXstudios
@IPOXstudios 5 лет назад
Glad you liked the video, thanks for watching!
@miguelmarquez3877
@miguelmarquez3877 4 года назад
Nice job !
@IPOXstudios
@IPOXstudios 4 года назад
Miguel Marquez thanks for watching!
@RoadtrippinwithTakacs
@RoadtrippinwithTakacs 6 лет назад
Nice video, Tavis. Keep it up. 👍 I simply enjoy hearing your analysis on all types of artists and their works.
@IPOXstudios
@IPOXstudios 6 лет назад
Thanks for the support, I will! Take care!
@sydene54
@sydene54 6 лет назад
You're great, generous; I just paint (with a little astrology on the side). You absolutely amaze me. Can't get enough....and thank you for being in the world.
@IPOXstudios
@IPOXstudios 6 лет назад
Denyse LeBlanc thanks for the nice comment and support! 🙏🏼
@abriefhistoryoftwopeoplein2732
I enjoyed this video. Always fun to see your take on photographers. I'd love to see you do one on Martine Franck. As far as Winogrand or McCurry goes, well, that is hard to say. Winogrand has some really great, genuine, and sometimes humorous moments captured of people in their daily lives. And as you've shown the crooked horizons he has give a sense of spontaneity and a frenetic feel. McCurry's photos seem to just entrance me. I don't know of it is his use of perspective lines that give his photos such a sense of depth, or his color theory, or use of (What appears to be) strong diagonals. So, I enjoy both. A bit of a cop out answer but I can find plenty of images from either that I really love. Also, as someone very new to the whole dynamic symmetry composition thing I have really enjoyed your channel. I keep researching into it further and further and taking in youtube content from you, Adam Marelli, James Cowman, and of course Mr. Barnstone. Basically whatever I can find, haha. I recently finished the Michel Jacobs book on dynamic symmetry and yes, I have your books on my need to read list too! Anyway, point is, thank you for the content! It has been interesting, entertaining, and educational.
@IPOXstudios
@IPOXstudios 6 лет назад
Interesting request, I'll see what I can do :D I love her work! I have to agree with you on both Winogrand and McCurry. Completely different styles, but both really inspiring! Thanks for the nice words on the channel, I'm glad you're enjoying the videos so far. I really appreciate the support!
@herbprattle5054
@herbprattle5054 6 лет назад
Travis has already distorted and misrepresentation the compositional aspects of Cartier- Bresson. Please don't do Martine Franck (his wife). Let her rest in peace.
@angrd020
@angrd020 6 лет назад
This was one of the most fantastic, fun and fact filled videos on a photographer I have seen in a long long while. I thoroughly enjoyed it and your editing style. Have a great day!
@IPOXstudios
@IPOXstudios 6 лет назад
Thanks, I appreciate the support! :D
@johnharrill864
@johnharrill864 6 лет назад
If you consider a guy who has never met the man he is talking about making a bunch of random assumptions facts then yes, this is a fact filled video.
@stefanol9272
@stefanol9272 5 лет назад
I always been a big fan of Gary winogrand
@horoshuhin
@horoshuhin 6 лет назад
Great info on street photography. Garry winogrand is definitely inspiration. Found your channel through Barnstone. Keep it up.
@IPOXstudios
@IPOXstudios 6 лет назад
That's great to hear, Barnstone is legendary! :D Thanks for watching and commenting!
@JohannesLabusch
@JohannesLabusch 6 лет назад
Loved his show at the Metropolitan Museum in NY about a year ago. He reminds me of Tom Waits ... great advice on the issue of cropping. I'll definitely be more reluctant to crop and straighten everything. Also: "The betting average is bad when shooting from the hip." ... I feel like flip screens (like on my Fuji X-T2) have made a huge difference.
@IPOXstudios
@IPOXstudios 6 лет назад
Johannes Labusch nice to hear, I wish I could’ve seen one of his exhibits! Glad you found some value in the video. Yeh, the flip out screens are perfect for shooting from the hip👌🏽
@fatherchristmas2998
@fatherchristmas2998 5 лет назад
great images
@chrishowitt9654
@chrishowitt9654 4 года назад
Really enjoying your videos, somehow stumbled across your content on You Tube and it really helps me to define who I am as a photographer, what makes me click and how I edit. Everything I watch, including yourself, is a great learning curve. I thank you and everyone else contributing to the art of photography. Maybe one day I'll do my own videos.
@IPOXstudios
@IPOXstudios 4 года назад
Chris Howitt thanks for the nice comment, I’m glad you’re enjoying the videos. Definitely do some videos to help others when you can. Take care!
@artemorbid
@artemorbid 6 лет назад
Great content. I had never heard of Garry before, thanks for the post.
@IPOXstudios
@IPOXstudios 6 лет назад
artemorbid thanks, I appreciate it! Yeh he’s a good one to know for sure 👌🏽
@joer1402
@joer1402 4 года назад
Good analysis.
@IPOXstudios
@IPOXstudios 4 года назад
Joe R thanks for watching!
@blueridgebill3763
@blueridgebill3763 6 лет назад
Back in the day, on many occasions, I observed Winogrand working. To the uninitiated he appeared to be suffering from Tourette's Syndrome. I considered photographing him photographing other people but rejected that as not being cricket. It was a great show just watching & very instructive & inspiring. He appeared to be a man obsessed, especially with women. I guess you need that passion to be good at anything.
@IPOXstudios
@IPOXstudios 6 лет назад
Wow, that would've been amazing to see! I didn't realize he was suffering with Tourette's syndrome. That's unfortunate, but he really did some amazing things with his camera :D Thanks for sharing your story and for the support!
@MrPaladin123
@MrPaladin123 5 лет назад
"To the uninitiated..." this means he APPEARED. he did NOT Have any thing wrong with him. It was a 'ploy' . He knew he was using this 'quirkiness' to get the shots.
@Frisenette
@Frisenette 5 лет назад
Blue Ridge Bill you should write something on your experiences. It would be gold for many people.
@BenjaminBphotographer
@BenjaminBphotographer 4 года назад
Great video! Your thoughts on the the photographs are insightful and useful.
@fenet8717
@fenet8717 3 года назад
rly insightful, thank u
@IPOXstudios
@IPOXstudios 3 года назад
Glad you enjoyed it!
@MrCalvinGu
@MrCalvinGu 5 лет назад
I wished I had seen this video sooner. I was wondering whether I should straighten out an image I took or not; this helped me decide that I shouldn't!
@IPOXstudios
@IPOXstudios 5 лет назад
Glad the video helped out, thanks for watching!
@guanacodebike4472
@guanacodebike4472 4 года назад
You must. Its extremely disturbing Horizon that is not straight...
@richardsimms251
@richardsimms251 2 года назад
Great video. RS. Canada
@IPOXstudios
@IPOXstudios 2 года назад
Thanks for watching!
@hafiz2664
@hafiz2664 6 лет назад
Another great content Tavis. Hope you can cover more works from photographers. While i enjoy the dynamism of a painter's work, i find it too perfect for me. Kinda like "too much of a good thing is a bad thing". I much prefer a photographer's work because of it's spontaneity. The random imperfection in a photo which is perfect in it's own right. Something like that. Works from Garry Winogrand certainly don't hit all the ticks in the world of Dynamic Symmetry (the diagonals and such) in my opinion but i've come to realise that it isn't all about the lines. Other aspects in the arsenal of Dynamic Symmetry can be used interchangeably and you'd still have a well composed image. I used to think that it's all about hitting the diagonals and arabesque and everything but upon further research and understanding, i realised that i've been wrong this whole time.
@IPOXstudios
@IPOXstudios 6 лет назад
Thank you for watching! You're right about that, dynamic symmetry is a tool and not a rule ;) Capturing a remarkable image is more than just the diagonals of the grid. There's a lot to consider when it comes to visual perception, clarity, unity, rhythm, arabesques, contrast, balance, and telling a story within a photo. Thanks for all the support! It sounds like you're really absorbing and understanding the content well. Take care!
@RogerKeith74
@RogerKeith74 6 лет назад
I'm happy to found you. Very nice video. thanks
@IPOXstudios
@IPOXstudios 6 лет назад
Roger Bloemers thanks for watching and commenting. I’m glad you liked the video :D
@davieltaveras7064
@davieltaveras7064 6 лет назад
esta clase de videos son buenos por que presentas teorias en la practica y tambien hablas de otros fotografos y asi se aprende del pasado.
@IPOXstudios
@IPOXstudios 6 лет назад
¡Gracias, buen comentario y apoyo!
@jzf128
@jzf128 5 лет назад
He is a genius.
@hudster1969
@hudster1969 4 года назад
Good video, interesting to see Winogrand's style and some really interesting photos. But cropping isn't a bad thing and Henri Cartier-Bresson did crop his photos. I agree that straightening the horizon can detract from the organic feel of an image.
@vinylisland6386
@vinylisland6386 Год назад
Winogrand was a genius.
@badgerag
@badgerag 5 лет назад
Great insights, thank you.
@IPOXstudios
@IPOXstudios 5 лет назад
badgerag you’re welcome thanks for watching! 🙏🏼
@gcymous9160
@gcymous9160 6 лет назад
I will love an honest crooked photo capturing a moment in black and white over any so called "fine art" or commercial photo any day . ken heyman , eugene smith, brassai , bresson , the photographers who got work through the FDR New Deal , etc are most precious to me .
@lensmanm4
@lensmanm4 5 лет назад
They are so entirely different. Period. McCurry is the perfect face of Nat Geo. Winogrand is the imperfect face of American Society.
@room111photography5
@room111photography5 6 лет назад
I love Winogrand and Eggleston. Many of their shots ran afoul of all the "rules" of composition, and that is why I love them.
@IPOXstudios
@IPOXstudios 6 лет назад
Room 111 Photography you have great taste in photographers, thanks for watching! 👌🏽
@IPOXstudios
@IPOXstudios 6 лет назад
Thanks for watching and commenting! That's a great perspective, and Degas was amazing!
@JamieJobb
@JamieJobb 6 месяцев назад
Winogrand's SLR required him to click forward each frame, so passers by knew when he was shooting. The modern DSLR shooter can mute the "shutter" -- and with no film to be advanced, the cameraman doesn't need that bother. Wonder what spontaneity Winogrand could have evoked with a modern camera?
@StuartHerrington
@StuartHerrington 5 лет назад
The photo you mention where you said it was low and possibly shot from the hip, it actually looks like it was shot out of a car window perhaps, judging by the bottom left hand part of the photograph which is a solid element out of focus, due to it been close - could be the car window when rolled down.
@IPOXstudios
@IPOXstudios 5 лет назад
Stuart Herrington good catch! I see that now and someone else noticed too. Thanks for watching!
@misterruggles9736
@misterruggles9736 4 года назад
came across by chance. interesting. subbed.
@robertbutts9835
@robertbutts9835 5 лет назад
Awesome work ..love your video I love the idea of not straightening the image . I spend so much time trying to straighten .. do something on Robert Frank
@IPOXstudios
@IPOXstudios 5 лет назад
Thanks for watching!👌🏽
@barrycohen311
@barrycohen311 5 лет назад
I like these kind of things.
@fatherchristmas2998
@fatherchristmas2998 5 лет назад
I’ve never heard of any one going to a art gallery and people looking down the edge of the painting to judge if the painting is has sharp at the edges has the middle
@IPOXstudios
@IPOXstudios 5 лет назад
father christmas very true, thanks for watching!
@MeumGaudiumRivegauche
@MeumGaudiumRivegauche 6 лет назад
Nice one. Thank's!
@IPOXstudios
@IPOXstudios 6 лет назад
Thanks for the support!
@topturn9653
@topturn9653 5 лет назад
me too-very good work
@IPOXstudios
@IPOXstudios 5 лет назад
Top Turn thanks for watching!
@gingerkitty4
@gingerkitty4 6 лет назад
thank you so much wonderful
@IPOXstudios
@IPOXstudios 6 лет назад
You're welcome, thanks for watching!
@Steyreon
@Steyreon 4 года назад
I think the crooked horizon is just a side effect of the snappy way he shoots. To me it looks like he just doesn´t care about it. And there will always be an other straight line somewhere in the pic because by tilting the camera you straighten other lines that would otherwise be tilted. To me he just doesn´t care about geometry but only about the motif. I mostly shoot the very same way, about motif, not about frame.
@IPOXstudios
@IPOXstudios 4 года назад
Steyreon that’s a great response, thanks for watching!
@meghanalexander1994
@meghanalexander1994 6 лет назад
Loved this one. Thank you!
@pjhoury2072
@pjhoury2072 4 года назад
The horizon line question is moot. Garry talks in the video used (but not included) about disguising your intention. Look like you're trying to control your camera-like an amateur, when you make the exposure. Make your capture like this. He often worked like this.
@IPOXstudios
@IPOXstudios 4 года назад
PJ Houry thanks for watching and sharing your thoughts!
@sydene54
@sydene54 6 лет назад
Steve! strong visual statements using language of colour in composition
@zpolukuchka
@zpolukuchka 5 лет назад
also it gives some sense motion to the subject even if that monition is on the photographers part
@IPOXstudios
@IPOXstudios 5 лет назад
zpolukuchka thanks for watching and sharing your thoughts 👌🏽
@Thurston.Howell.the.3rd
@Thurston.Howell.the.3rd 4 года назад
shout out to Harry Perry @ 3:00
@igaluitchannel6644
@igaluitchannel6644 2 года назад
Crooked horizon lines. Have you ever seen a Van Gogh or a Cezanne? Would they be more interesting if they were photoshopped to straighten the vertical and horizontal lines? I once had a photo of mine criticized this way when I had intentionally skewed the perspective.
@IPOXstudios
@IPOXstudios 2 года назад
Thanks for watching and sharing your thoughts!
@paulgurcules4271
@paulgurcules4271 5 лет назад
The thing with Garry Winogrand's crooked lines happened because he didn't compose his shots. He basically shot so fast that had no time to pose and many of his great "street" photos happened by chance.
@IPOXstudios
@IPOXstudios 5 лет назад
Paul Gurcules thanks for sharing your thoughts!👌🏽
@Frisenette
@Frisenette 5 лет назад
BS! They are obviously composed. It’s just that straightening the horizon takes longer than composing. He made a virtue or point out of not caring about the horizon.
@kurturholt
@kurturholt 4 года назад
The "hip shot" you refer to, of the man and woman on the sidewalk, is probably taken from the inside of a car, that is why the angle is low. No "hip shot".
@IPOXstudios
@IPOXstudios 4 года назад
Kurt Urholt thanks for watching! Yes that makes sense thanks!
@rajnandy7472
@rajnandy7472 4 года назад
In the the clip of Garry at 7:02 he isn't referring to his use of a tilted angle in his shots, but the use of a "view camera" or large format camera by others to achieve "parallel verticals" to get away from the barrel distortion visible on vertical lines when using wide lenses with a 35mm camera. He sees no benefit to this.
@myoung48281
@myoung48281 5 лет назад
Don't listen too much to the neg. comments here, Tavis, this is about your take on Winogrand and that's why people subscribe to your videos. By the way, that guy dressed in white on roller skates is still around, I bought a CD of his one of my trips to Venice Beach.
@IPOXstudios
@IPOXstudios 5 лет назад
mark y thanks I appreciate that! 🙏🏼I never let it get to me. That’s funny he’s still rollerskating around! Living the dream.
@Frisenette
@Frisenette 5 лет назад
Tavis Leaf Glover perhaps you *should* let it get to you. At least a bit.
@jimijamsham
@jimijamsham 3 года назад
straightening an image works if it works... spontaneity is one thing ].. fixing the photo after spontaneity is ok if it works
@Tyrell_Corp2019
@Tyrell_Corp2019 3 года назад
“ Crooked horizon lines“ is the same for me as saying crooked brushstrokes. There can be no such thing.
@emagine45
@emagine45 4 года назад
The irony is that one of Henri Cartier-Bresson’s most famous photos (guy jumping over a puddle) is cropped.
@equaliser2265
@equaliser2265 4 года назад
Life is not uniform, it's the image that counts, if it's interesting or sparks a memory that hits your soul.
@bivboy10
@bivboy10 6 лет назад
Interesting bud👌
@IPOXstudios
@IPOXstudios 6 лет назад
Thanks!
@Riverrockphotos
@Riverrockphotos Год назад
Here's my opinion and may not be worth a whole lot. But if there is a lot of fast action unless it is being repeated over and over and over again, if you have a straight horizon it looks more staged.
@IPOXstudios
@IPOXstudios Год назад
Very true! Thanks for watching!
@liverpix
@liverpix 5 лет назад
I do straighten my crooked street photos but only partially.
@davehenderson9105
@davehenderson9105 5 лет назад
If you have a richo GR you can hip shoot better I have heard. But I dont do it very much personally either unless I have a flippy screen I can look down at.
@IPOXstudios
@IPOXstudios 5 лет назад
Dave Henderson you’re right, I have the GR3 and shooting from the hip is so fun! It was really impossible when trying it with a 50mm. Thanks for watching and commenting!
@John-do9ei
@John-do9ei 3 года назад
You talk about this subject kind of like I would have when I was 17, walking around LA with an F3, trying to be Winogrand, like it's some kind of gimmick to create a particular feel of spontaneity in an image, (but really to create an image of the photographer as being spontaneous, the ethos of spontaneity, like as if this is the key to greatness). It's telling that you cut the interviews right before Winogrand goes into the very interesting philosophical and aesthetic reasons for doing this. I was hoping I could use this for teaching materials, but ultimately it falls short. I encourage you to read stuff like Jacques Derrida, Ed Said, Gayatri Spivak, as much or more so than the photo commentary, to help you understand how something like this might be challenging to a received aesthetic that might be wrapped up in things like colonialism, patriarchy, white privilege, stuff like that.
@zrinkomaloseja2615
@zrinkomaloseja2615 4 года назад
Great photos. Would've been even better with a straight horizon... :)
@IPOXstudios
@IPOXstudios 4 года назад
Zrinko Maloseja thanks for watching!
@vinzenzbraun3148
@vinzenzbraun3148 3 года назад
Man, you remind me of Pau Gasol 😅
@IPOXstudios
@IPOXstudios 3 года назад
Lol thanks!
@ashleydarby3652
@ashleydarby3652 2 года назад
@10:32 if he had straightened this one the subject lady would have been at a really strange angle which proves that the idea of keeping the horizon level is rubbish because it also depends on how the horizon fits in with the pan of the image relative to the subject
@IPOXstudios
@IPOXstudios 2 года назад
Thanks for checking out the video and sharing your thoughts!
@iino2ii
@iino2ii 4 года назад
3:30 the hand with the camera on the left and the shadow below it shows another photographer. I wonder who that is... 🤔
@maxshelltrack9720
@maxshelltrack9720 4 года назад
In street photography you're not thinking of getting a straight image you don't have time your trying to get the poeple honestly until I came across this video I never realized it.
@IPOXstudios
@IPOXstudios 4 года назад
max shelltrack thanks for watching and sharing your thoughts!
@brianhinesley
@brianhinesley Год назад
even though steve curry is better at framing/beautiful composition.. i still prefer to look at Winograd's work.
@IPOXstudios
@IPOXstudios Год назад
Thanks for watching!
@Drobek6
@Drobek6 6 лет назад
I am frankly tired of people knocking an image down, just because of a crooked horisontal line. If the rest of the image is spot on. I really love Garry´s work. Personal when I shoot street, i never think of the horisontal line, there is just no time, when you see a great shot. It can be gone in a second.
@pabcasado
@pabcasado 4 года назад
8:23 this one is not shot from the hip but from its car.
@IPOXstudios
@IPOXstudios 4 года назад
Pablo C great thanks for letting me know. Thanks for watching!
@David-yt6kp
@David-yt6kp 5 лет назад
Photography is an art form as much or more than it is a science. Yet everyone wants to set boundaries the artist can be creative within. No cropping, straight horizons, rule of thirds, and so on. If no one stepped outside those boundaries, what a boring art photography would be. I like Garry's style, and I like it that he didn't let others tell him how to do what he did. I wouldn't dream of telling Van Gogh how to paint. Don't tell me how to make a picture. People either like your art, or they don't. Obviously, they liked his.
@IPOXstudios
@IPOXstudios 5 лет назад
David cool, thanks for watching and sharing your thoughts!
@tempest01100
@tempest01100 6 лет назад
Was this video shot on a boat?
@IPOXstudios
@IPOXstudios 6 лет назад
haha, no it's in my mobile studio...a converted 15 passenger van. Thanks for watching!
@ruechel
@ruechel 4 года назад
i'm sorry i don't mean to be harsh but you clearly haven't understood the first thing about photography: there is only one rule: THERE ARE NO RULES. you spend 14 minutes obsessing about straight lines which is utterly pointless in stating the blatantly obvious. "Street" or documentary photography happens in a split second of visceral reaction to one's environment. If you think about vertical or horizontal lines, you'll miss the shot. You can clearly train your ability to compose rapidly and use technique to create TENSION or ATTENTION but neither has to do with straight or crooked lines. It's just a complete waste of time to think about. The world is full of so-called photographers who execute with technical perfection adhering to all the aesthetic conventions they teach you in photo school (another complete waste of time) but cre"ate nothing but empty and boring pictures. Then there are artists who make what could be called "technically flawed" photographs of such beauty and power it stops you dead in your tracks. Winogrand was one of those people. There is really NOTHING to talk about: just look at the work and it either moves you in some way or it doesn't. Fxxk straight horizons.
@IPOXstudios
@IPOXstudios 4 года назад
Nick Ruechel Thanks for watching and sharing your thoughts!
@fatherchristmas2998
@fatherchristmas2998 5 лет назад
we don’t use a spirit level on our eyes were we see things
@Frisenette
@Frisenette 6 лет назад
9:45 you never ever “ask for a photo”. Then you are into something completely different.
@juliusw6007
@juliusw6007 6 лет назад
8:30 that was shot out of a car wasnt it? Look into the left hand corner
@IPOXstudios
@IPOXstudios 6 лет назад
Great catch, it does look like that was shot from a car, which explains the lower angle. Thanks! :D
@juliusw6007
@juliusw6007 6 лет назад
Tavis Leaf Glover Sure mate, really enjoying your videos, especially the one on dynamic symmetry, really opened my eyes.
@IPOXstudios
@IPOXstudios 6 лет назад
Julius W that’s great to hear, thanks! 🙏🏼
@winogrant
@winogrant 3 года назад
Winogrant didn’t fiddle with his camera to look like an amateur, he was looking at the distance markers on his lens using the range finder system so he wouldn’t have to manually focus. You should do some homework.
@samthegreatgenius
@samthegreatgenius 3 года назад
It's not that he was scared of the women. He wanted to remain as invisible as possible.
@alejandroalvarez1544
@alejandroalvarez1544 5 лет назад
Raise, lift, aim, but instead “whips,” ha.
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