

Street Photography Magazine
Street Photography Magazine
The Official Journal of Street and Documentary Photography
Episodes
Mentioned books

Apr 23, 2021 • 47min
Philipp Meiners – Turning a Personal Project into a Photo Book
German photographer Philipp Meiners discusses his passion for street photography and turning personal projects into photo books. He shares his process of curating his favorite photos, selecting materials, and creating a yearbook. Topics include using Lightroom, choosing the right paper, shooting in black and white, and exploring different locations for photography.

Apr 9, 2021 • 37min
Matt Jerrams Talks Street Photography
Matt Jerrams is an executive producer who creates television commercials in the UK, who also happens to have a real passion for street photograhpy. As always, Matt Jerrams and I had plenty to talk about in this episode of our podcast. Matt is in London, currently under lockdown again, se he had some free time to spare to talk all things street photography. As always, we had plenty to discuss. We talked street photography news, gear of course (Matt recently got rid of his Leica *gasp* because he didn’t like it.), and what it’s like to be in the middle of lockdown – yet again.
A Selection of Matt’s Street Photos
Covid Memorial WallHensFather and Son EastbourneMargate 2017
Podcast Links
Matt’s Instagram

Mar 26, 2021 • 30min
Keep your street photography work consistent – Craig Litten
Photojournalist and advertising lifestyle photographer, Craig Litten, earns his living making photographs. So he knows the importance of having his work taken seriously.
Craig says that one of the most important factors in being taken seriously is to take it seriously yourself. And part of that is to be consistent in the work you show to the world. That means everything whether it’s in your portfolio, on your website, in contests or within editorial pieces.
As a coach and mentor or other photographers Craig sees the most inconsistencies in photographers’ black and white work. In one portfolio he often sees monochrome images that are high contrast, some that are flat and others with crushed blacks and so on. He says it often looks like the photos were made by multiple people. It’s all over the place.
“Yikes”, I thought, “that sounds like my website.”
His recommendation is to tap into your own creative vision, create you own signature black and white style and apply that consistently to all work you show publicly. And do it no matter what camera and editing software you use. The key is to have a repeatable workflow of your own, not a copy of someone else.
Craig created a 2-part seminar which he calls The Darkroom in Lightroom that teaches how to apply the Zone System to envision your final image when you take the shot. Then apply a set of basic principles to create your own repeatable workflow (no matter what camera and editing software you use) to achieve a consistent black and white look in each image.
Craig will be teaching the 2-part seminar to members of the Street Photography Magazine community beginning Tuesday, April 6 at 7:00PM EDT. See this for more information.
Links from the Show
Craig’s Website
Greg Burnett’s Street Photography Website
The Darkroom in Lightroom Seminar
The importance of maintaining a consistent B&W look
Here are 9 different photographs of Craig’s shot with 8 different cameras over a 35-year period. Two images were shot on different film types, and the other photographs were shot on 6 different digital cameras, yet they all have a similar style and feel to the toning.
Canon 5D 2008Canon 1D MKII 2007Canon 40D 2008Leica M8 2014Kodak Tri-X 1985Fuji X-Pro1 2013Film 1991Motorola G6 Cell Phone 2019Ricoh GR Digital 2015

Mar 12, 2021 • 47min
Ritchie Roesch – Fuji Photo Blogging
Ritchie Roesch is a Fuji photographer who lives in Salt Lake City. In his college days, he studied photography under June Van Cleef and has been a part-time/hobby photographer for two decades now. He’s also the author of the Fuji X Weekly photography blog, a blog dedicated to all things Fujifilm. He started out shooting 35mm film (like a lot of us) and eventually switched over to digital, although his love for that “film feel” never died.
We got together to geek out about Fuji and chatted about what it takes to run a photography blog, how to tweak the film settings in a Fuji camera, and much more.
Interview Links
Fuji X Weekly BlogFuji Film Recipe App
A Selection of Ritchie’s Photos

Mar 5, 2021 • 49min
Gulnara Samoilova – “Women Street Photographers” Book
Gulnara Samoilova is the founder of the Women Street Photographers project: a website, social media platform and annual exhibition. She also happens to be just the person who curated a new photo book called “Women Street Photographers” – a fantastic collection of photos showcasing images by 100 contemporary women street photographers from around the globe, accompanied by personal statements about their work.
Gulnara was kind enough to take a few moments to chat with us about how the book came together and how she hopes it shapes the world of street photography – particularly for women street photographers.
The book is now available for purchase. Buy your copy here.
Interview Links
Women Street Photographers BookWomen Street Photographers WebsiteWomen Street Photographers on Instagram
A Selection of Images from “Women Street Photographers”
“Red Upsweep” by Jane Levine, 2019“Shoulder Birds” by Dimpy Bhalotia, 2018“The Serpentine” by Efrat Sela, 2017“Cloud Eaters” by Gulnara Samoilova, 2018“Sun Worship” by Laura Reid, 2017“A Dance of Joy” by Regula Tschumi, 2019

Feb 26, 2021 • 55min
Nicolas St-Pierre – Long and Short Form Photography Projects
Nicolas St-Pierre may come from a small town in Quebec, but by all accounts, he is a world traveler. Nicolas is a diplomat with the Canadian Foreign Service, which has meant extensive travel around the world and even a few stints living abroad in places like China and Japan.
But as has been the case for many of us, a global pandemic brought international travel to an abrupt halt for Nicolas. To keep his creative juices flowing, Nicolas recently embarked on a project called “The Longest Road” about Bank Street in Ottawa. (See the project in the February 2021 issue.) In our conversation, we discussed long and short form projects as well as Nicolas’ experience publishing his project on Blurb.
Interview Links
Nicolas’ WebsiteThe Longest Road bookThe Hershey Electric Train ProjectInstagramFacebookTwitter
A Selection of Nicolas’ Photos

Feb 12, 2021 • 55min
Casey Meshbesher – Connecting People Through Platforms
Casey Meshbesher is a street photography, video, and multimedia artist. She is also a researcher, curator, and the founder of @womeninstreet (WiS), a platform we love just for female street photographers. She is also the editor Her Side of the Street, a street photography blogzine for female street photographers.
Casey was kind enough to take some time to chat with us about many subjects, including her own photography, the value of making connections through platforms, and the research that goes into that process.
For example, WiS started on Facebook in 2016, and is now on Instagram, Medium, and an IG/YouTube channel. Women in Street is a global network built on research, a community forum, a publication that showcases emerging and seasoned talent, and a movement to strengthen visibility of women. It functions as a collective of sorts where collaborators come and go. Contributors may be long or short term, handle special projects, curate, or contribute to the blog. Galleries are a popular feature with a new guest curator and theme each month, and have public submissions from hundreds of regular participants in Facebook. Nowadays, WiS Instagram has over 25,000 followers, 2,000 members in its Facebook group and a strong blogzine following as well. It’s become a community where opportunities abound for female street photographers – something that didn’t exist just a few years ago.
What kind of opportunities, you ask? Here’s a good example: One big part of the project has been the world map of female street photographers, a researched database linking the global network. It has been used in consultation with publications, festivals, organizations. Featured speakers have been identified via the map and consulting with WiS. When traveling, women use this feature to look one another up, and friendships and collaborations have been formed. Many have said that they knew very few female street photographers before encountering them through Women in Street’s platforms.
Find out more about the birth and growth of WiS, the photography of Casey Meshbesher, and the growing community of female street photographers she has helped to bring together in this audio interview.
At Miami Street Photography Festival, L to R: Susanne Baumgartner, Niki Gleoudi, Nancy Moon, Adriane Ryan, MSPF co-founder Lynne Kaplan, Casey Meshbesher, 2018 WiS curator and admin Eleonore Simon, Melissa O’Shaughnessy
Interview Links
Women in StreetWiS Community LinksCasey Meshbesher’s WebsiteCasey Meshbesher on Instagram
A Selection of Casey’s Photos
A friend of this woman’s alerted her that she was in this photo and she contacted me, very excited, and shared it on her profiles. This has happened a few other times, always a positive reaction, a plus for a smaller city.

Feb 5, 2021 • 0sec
Juan Reyes – Founder of Miami Street Photography Festival
Juan Jose Reyes has been running one of our favorite street photography festivals for several years now, the Miami Street Photography Festival. When a pandemic threw a wrench in the works for the 2020, Juan was quick to shift the festival from an in-person event to an online one – no small feat.
Listen in to hear about how he managed to make a success of the festival despite the challenges, upcoming festival plans in Milan for 2021, workshops going on now, and find out more about Juan’s personal street photography work.
Juan’s Links
Miami Street Photography FestivalMSPF WorkshopsJuan on Instagram
A Selection of Juan’s Photos

Jan 29, 2021 • 59min
Fredericksburg Street Photography Collective
Fredericksburg Street Photography is an enthusiastic collective that started up just about a year ago – right before the pandemic really hit hard in the U.S. About 20 members meet up regularly at artsy coffee shops and local watering holes to discuss photography and learn from each other. They describe themselves as a group that is “more hipster than pixel peeking” that enjoys “getting out and shooting free style photography as [they] search for subjects and settings that best reflect the city and community of Fredericksburg.”
Links
Fredericksburg Street Photography WebsiteTed Nelson’s InstagramShawn Faherty’s InstagramIan Soper’s Instagram
A Selection of Fredericksburg Street Photography Photos
Shawn FahertyShawn FahertyShawn FahertyTed NelsonTed NelsonTed Nelson

Jan 22, 2021 • 55min
Valérie Jardin – Street photography in the winter
This is just a quick reminder registration for the Publishing a Photo Book Workshop taught by Harvey Stein will close this coming Sunday (January 24) at midnight.
The 7-week course begins Tuesday, January 26 at 1:00 PM Eastern time.
It’s designed to help photographers who either have a completed project to publish but don’t know how to find and approach potential publishers or are thinking about arranging their images into a book form.
Click Here to learn more.
Our Guest Valérie Jardin
Our guest today is Valerie Jardin who needs no introduction. She is one of the preeminent women street photographers of today. Originally from France she now lives with her family in Minneapolis, Minnesota.
She leads workshops worldwide, writes books, produces a weekly podcast, and is an official X Photographer for Fujifilm USA.And she’s the host of the very popular podcast Hit The Streets.
Although the pandemic has slowed down her workshop schedule she doesn’t let that or the bitter cold in Minnesota keep her down. She’s proof the none of us should complain that we can’t pursue our photography because nobody is out, everyone is wearing a mask or that it’s too cold.
For example, Valerie began a project called On Ice where she has been photographing the community of people who enjoy life on the frozen lakes of Minnesota.
A selection of Valérie’s photos
Links from the show
Valérie’s WebsiteValérie’s InstagramValérie’s WorkshopsValérie’s new book: Street Photography AssignmentsHit The Streets Podcast