Overcoming the Greatest Fear in Street Photography
Every photographer who has thought about photographing a public space knows the low-humming anxiety of the "worst-case scenario." The fear of someone seeing and confronting us remains one of the steepest mental hurdles to actually getting started in street photography. For years, it was mine. We convince ourselves that the moment we are noticed, the world will grind to a halt and anger will follow. But what actually happens when the nightmare comes true?
On a summer Saturday morning, I had the dubious pleasure of finding out.
Caught in the Act
I went out looking to create a photograph of a local farmers market as part of a summer series I was working on. Having spent an hour or so looking for compositions in and among the crowd, I felt like I had made the image I would need for my set. Since I was already out, I decided to stick around and push myself. I played around with different approaches and compositions to see what else might feel right to me.
I circled the market a couple more times and then wandered down behind one row of vendor tents. That's when a scene caught my eye.
One of the white canopy tents had its back flap pulled halfway down, perfectly bisecting the two women working inside. From my vantage point, they were completely headless. Just two bodies in motion under a canvas frame. A few feet closer to me, a man from their team was sitting low in a folding chair. By lining up the shot just right, I could position his head at the bottom of the frame, visually "extending" the bodies under the tent. I was attempting to create a strange, humorous slice of everyday life. If you want to build a broader skill set across genres like this, The Well-Rounded Photographer: 8 Instructors Teach 8 Genres of Photography is a useful resource.
I clicked the shutter.
Not entirely convinced by this first attempt, I planned to refine the composition and try again. That's when, in unison, the two women popped their heads below the tent flap.
"Hi!" they said.
I froze.
Then the man sitting on the chair turned around.
"Hello," he said, somewhat quizzically. He was wondering what I was up to, what I had done to attract attention. I could sense it.
How should I respond? What was the right move here? Were they going to be upset that I was photographing them from behind, a bit surreptitiously?
My emotional self remained frozen, unwilling to move. Meanwhile, my mind started to race. I watched the thoughts form, almost as if they were in the air between me and these three people. They just kept looking at me, waiting.
In that split second, I noticed that my mind was serving up parts of the street photography books I had recently been reading through. One thing in particular, repeated by all the photographers: Bryan Peterson, Matt Stuart, Joel Meyerowitz. Be honest, be open, be genuine. Smile.
I finally spoke.
"Hi," I replied, filling the word with as much smile and sincerity as possible, and hoping that what felt like a minute of racing thoughts really was just a second.
"Are you photographing for the village?" one of the women asked.
My emotions exhaled. My mind continued to race. I saw that I was still standing behind the parked cars of the vendors. That felt more closed off than open. I stepped through the cars to stand next to their booth, while answering that I was not an official photographer.
As I stopped next to the tent, the woman continued asking questions. "Do you take family photos?"
"No," I said. "I primarily photograph landscapes and cityscapes. I'm trying to do more street."
"So you're local then?"
"Yes, I live just up on this road."
The man had moved to the back area of the tent, while I stood on the side.
"You look hungry," he insisted.
I had told him twice already that I was not. I suppose he wasn't as interested in what sort of photographer I am.
"Have a falafel," he said. "They don't have any fillers like flour. They're gluten free. I'll give you one on the house."
I've had falafels before. I don't dislike them, but I've never had a falafel that sold me on liking them either. But given my predicament, it seemed immensely rude to continue refusing. I relented, and bit into the one this gentleman had almost forced on me. There is no other way to put it: it was absolutely delicious. I told them as much. I thanked them. I walked on, in part to see if there were any other photographic opportunities, but also to release all the stress and adrenaline that had built up.
Expectation Versus Reality
Our brains are hardwired to protect us from threats, whether dangerous animals or social ones that feel a bit more existential. When it comes to street photography, this means they can often lie to us. We dream of a hostile, aggressive world that rarely exists where most of us would choose to wander with our cameras. We project our own feelings of vulnerability onto the people we are photographing, assuming they will meet our camera with anger.
But the reality of human connection is usually much kinder. When you get spotted, the outcome is rarely a shouting match. More often than not, it is simply curiosity.
If you are struggling to move past that initial fear of shooting in public, the worst thing you can do is hide the camera or sneak away. Slouching down or pretending you were looking at your screen can make it look like you were doing something wrong. It triggers suspicion, inviting the sorts of reactions you feared in the first place. Sneaking away keeps you behind the barrier. Instead, owning the moment, stepping into the space, and simply being honest about what you are doing humanizes you. It turns an anonymous lens into a neighbor.
Some lessons you have to learn by doing. All of those street photography books were helpful, edifying. They gave me the framework and encouragement to make the right move in that moment. And while it won't always result in a delicious, free falafel, being open even when feeling vulnerable is undoubtedly the right choice.
The only thing I regret from that Saturday at the farmers market is that I didn't get to play around with more compositions before they spotted me!
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