- This event has passed.
London Street Photography Workshop: Camden and Primrose Hill
October 1, 2022 @ 10:00 am – 5:00 pm
An immersive, intimate, and inspirational street photography workshop with award-winning urban photographer Richard Morgan.
From the hustle and bustle of Camden Market, across its vibrant and colourful streets, to the top of Primrose Hill and its famous view of London’s skyline, this workshop provides a unique photographic learning opportunity in one of London’s most iconic culture centres.
Max no. of participants: 8
This is an immersive, intimate, and inspirational workshop led by the award-winning urban photographer, Richard Morgan. By the end of the day you will be a significantly better photographer, having learned not only how to use your camera more effectively to give you the shots you want, but how to express yourself, your voice and your style through the photographs you take.
You will discover some essential skills and approaches that will take you outside your comfort zone and allow you to see the world in new and exciting ways. You will learn to notice the photographic potential in everyday street scenes happening around you, how to frame life on the streets in ways that produce compelling and stylish photographic compositions, and how to be there when the decisive moment happens, and of course, how to capture it.
This specialised training will give you the confidence to continue shooting on the street long after the workshop has ended, turning any fear connected to street photography into playful, fun, and creative excitement.
Workshop Schedule
The workshop runs from 10am – 5pm, with a 30-minute lunch break.
What to Expect?
You will be sent an email in advance of the workshop with details of our meeting location, start and finish times, a reminder of what you’ll need, and an outline of the workshop day.
Introductory Skill Session
The day starts in a quiet café with an in-depth skill-session tutorial, exploring:
- What is Street Photography and why do we fall in love with it?
- The gear, equipment, and camera settings we can use for street photography
- Techniques to become ‘invisible’ and make candid photographs of people in public
- Various ways to interact with and photograph strangers on the streets
- How to compose everyday street scenes and moments to make compelling street photographs
Morning Shoot
Heading out to the streets, we will put into practice some essential methods and approaches to making great street photographs, working on various techniques both as a group and individually.
Lunch (30 minutes)
Afternoon Shoot
We head back out to the streets, work on building our photographic compositions and step further out of our comfort zones as we strive to get closer to the action.
Image Review & De-brief
The day ends in a cosy pub with a constructive image-review session and a de-brief of the day’s experiences.
Post Workshop
You will be sent a ‘development letter’ with information and advice about how to continue your journey through street photography, plus plenty of encouragement to do so!
What you will learn
- Capture the decisive moment and make compelling compositions
- Harness the power of light in your photographs
- Find out which techniques and approaches work for you and your style
- Overcome the fear of photographing in public
- Get familiar with the work of great street photographers, past and present
- Tell stories through your photography
- Develop the all-round skills and confidence to express yourself through your photographs
What you will need
- Digital camera & spare batteries
- SD card(s) with plenty of space (SD only, not Compact Flash or Micro SD)
- Weather-appropriate clothing and comfortable shoes (we will be walking a lot!)
- Prepare to travel light: no flash, no tripod, no heavy bags
- An open mind and an open heart
About your workshop mentor:
Richard Morgan is a multi-award-winning photographer who has taught hundreds of professional street and reportage photography workshops for University College London, City Academy, and on his own private courses. His work has been commissioned and published by The Independent, The Guardian, The Telegraph, TimeOut, BBC Online, and the Daily Mail.