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Focus on Lisbon, Berlin, and Barcelona [Encore Publication]: History, architecture, and cultures yield boundless photographic opportunities
My wife and I recently returned from two weeks of travel in Europe to fulfill several of my photography assignments. I’ll publish separate posts in the coming weeks covering some of those professional assignments. In today’s post we’ll explore the vibrant capital cities of Lisbon, Berlin, and Barcelona. While each of these three cities has a personality very much its own, I’m hoping my images will demonstrate that photographing cities, like photographing people, is all about looking for what we have in common even as we celebrate our differences. Urban photography is special to me because cities are the places where history, architecture, and culture often align most dramatically to paint a full picture of how we live today. Note that all of these images and many more are available to view and, if desired, to purchase; just click on any image to view the gallery. Enjoy!
I hope you enjoyed these favorite images from three great European cities, along with my descriptions of how the images were made. To view more images, or perhaps to purchase a few, just click on any of the photos to go to the gallery.
What are your favorite techniques or images from your urban photography? Do you have urban themes you like to document wherever you travel? Please leave a comment and share your thoughts.
2 thoughts on “Focus on Lisbon, Berlin, and Barcelona [Encore Publication]: History, architecture, and cultures yield boundless photographic opportunities”
Thanks for your note. Nice set of photos from Lisbon and Sintra! I firmly believe a good photographer can get excellent results with nearly any gear. While, as you know, my own approach favors DSLR cameras with prime lenses (though I use zooms on occasion) and I consider post-processing (in moderation and with good taste) to be an essential part of the creative workflow, I also see plenty of photographers producing great work using very different approaches. I do encourage all my students/mentees to shoot in RAW and do at least minimal processing in Lightroom, because, quite simply, we throw away most of our data and creative choices when shooting in lossy formats like JPEG. But it’s all a personal choice. Thank you for the counterpoint and for sharing the images from Portugal!
Kyle,
Thought you might like to see what somebody who does it all almost the exact opposite of you does.
A mirrorless with a zoom and a Galaxy phone and no post processing. Thought a 180 might be of interest :<)!!
https://www.dropbox.com/sh/12yqv1easfb1jq0/AABB1C2PkCf2rcFKLTqMLbuva?dl=0
BTW, we did a Go Ahead Tour and much prefer OAT – all the difference in the world.
Hi Larry,
Thanks for your note. Nice set of photos from Lisbon and Sintra! I firmly believe a good photographer can get excellent results with nearly any gear. While, as you know, my own approach favors DSLR cameras with prime lenses (though I use zooms on occasion) and I consider post-processing (in moderation and with good taste) to be an essential part of the creative workflow, I also see plenty of photographers producing great work using very different approaches. I do encourage all my students/mentees to shoot in RAW and do at least minimal processing in Lightroom, because, quite simply, we throw away most of our data and creative choices when shooting in lossy formats like JPEG. But it’s all a personal choice. Thank you for the counterpoint and for sharing the images from Portugal!
Cheers,
Kyle