Occupy Central: A Festivity

Occupy Central is, of course, a political protest.

IMG_20141006_0013 640

But more than that – it is a festival.

IMG_20141006_0014 640

A celebration of a city becoming itself.

IMG_20141006_0015 640

A joyful gathering of sorts.

IMG_20141006_0016 640

Everyone has a message to share.

IMG_20141006_0021 640

The world is here – judging from the different languages.

IMG_20141006_0024 640

So many dreams and hopes, so much energy.

IMG_20141006_0025 640

The children are here.

IMG_20141006_0028 640

There is music. This is a celebration.

IMG_20141006_0033 640

Though there’re reminders of how serious this is, as a protest.

IMG_20141006_0034 640

Remember what the umbrellas are for.

IMG_20141006_0036 640

Marx: “Philosophers have interpreted the world in various ways; the point is to change it.”

IMG_20141006_0037 640

The students, the future, have spoken.

IMG_20141006_0038 640

Now it’s time to figure things out.

 

Camera: Leica M6;

Lens: Voigtlander Nokton Classic 35mm F/1.4;

Film: Ilford XP2 400.

 

 

 

 

Street Photography with my Leica M6

Street photography is to some extent about the art of making do.

I tend to think that street photographers are in the same category as street musicians, street performers and street hawkers.

There is technique but it’s the kind of technique shaped by being immersed in a specific environment, rather than one accrued by looking at charts, manuals, and pixels on computer screens.

I am in many ways reassured by David Gibson’s comments in his book The Street Photographer’s Manual, in which he says: “My technique is to get technique out of the way so that I can take pictures” (pg. 36).

He talks about respected street photographers who use the P mode (and cracked a photographer’s joke about “P” being the professional mode).

IMG_20140903_0001 640

This is the view from my office window – what I like about it is the contrast between nature (the hill) and the man-made (the air-conditioning whatchamacallit box-thing sticking out).

IMG_20140903_0004 640

I pay attention to composition, once I get the thing with the aperture/shutter speed and focus out of the way.

IMG_20140903_0005 640

So, buying a new lens for my Leica M6 provokes a crucial question about technique: what could a 35mm lens do that my 50mm Summicron couldn’t?

IMG_20140903_0006 640

If you have a 50mm lens, take 2 steps back and you have a 35mm lens… that’s street wisdom.

But a 50mm lens gives me that reach, as when I’m trying to capture part of a building, as in above.

IMG_20140903_0011 640

Or when I’m taking a picture like the one above. (Could you guess where I was?)

All photos above are taken with my 50mm Summicron Type II lens.

The rest below are with my newly acquired used Voigtlander 35mm f/1.4 Nokton Classic SC, which I think of as a budget (relatively speaking in Leica land) “old-school” lens for Leica film shooters.

All images from this post are from the same roll of film: Fuji Neopan 400CN.

IMG_20140903_0014 640

Was it money well spent?

Well … I couldn’t have taken the above shot otherwise, unless I take 2 steps back, which would have placed me in the path of traffic at Nathan Road at Tsim Sha Tsui during rush hour.

IMG_20140903_0015 640

I would have captured a smaller portion of the building above.

IMG_20140903_0016 640

Ditto.

IMG_20140903_0030 640

Ditto.

IMG_20140903_0019 640

Ditto at Shamshuipo.

There’s a hard-edged feel to the above that I like.

IMG_20140903_0021 640

I was trying to capture both people and buildings. The light wasn’t so good that day.

IMG_20140903_0037 640

This was on another day, with better light.

IMG_20140903_0035 640

Hmm… this brings me back to 1960s newsprint…

IMG_20140903_0031 640

Somehow the composition looks complete.

IMG_20140903_0032 640

The f 1.4 aperture means I could do some indoors street photography…

IMG_20140903_0034 640

Can you guess how the above was done?

Hint: it’s not double-exposure, and I don’t use Photoshop.

So anyway, I hope I’ve convinced you (and myself) why that 35mm Voigtlander lens was necessary.

Now that I have 2 lenses, what’s missing of course is another Leica body.

Perhaps a Leica M4 body might be a good backup/variant for the M6… which means I could do a double Leica combo on the streets…

Thanks for reading, and check out my Saatchi Art page!