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StreetSnappers - The Street Photography Podcast

Brian Lloyd Duckett | StreetSnappers
StreetSnappers - The Street Photography Podcast
Latest episode

12 episodes

  • StreetSnappers - The Street Photography Podcast

    Growth Happens In The Stretch Zone!

    22/06/2026 | 28 mins.
    Click here to EMAIL BRIAN with your questions, comments and suggestions for the show!
    Street photography is meant to feel alive, but online it can turn into constant arguments about who’s doing it “properly”. Think of the StreetSnappers podcast as a virtual pub instead: honest chat, no sniping, and enough practical detail that you can actually improve your work. That starts with a listener question that every zine-maker has faced sooner or later: why do my black and white images lose their punch in CMYK printing? We dig into rich black on uncoated paper, why screens lie, and how better tonal separation, proper greyscale conversion, and smart curve work in Lightroom, Photoshop, or Capture One can lift your pages from grey salad to crisp blacks and clean whites.

    Then we go deeper on a creative problem that sits behind most ‘stuck’ portfolios: comfort zones. Using the comfort-stretch-panic model (borrowed from military training), we break down what each zone looks like for street photographers, why growth happens near the top of stretch, and why panic is not brave, it is counterproductive. If your work feels empty or predictable, the answer is not a reckless leap, it is a controlled push with repeatable challenges you can sustain.

    Along the way there’s a quick beer review, a grounded take on The Art of Street Photography by Josh Jackson and Sean Tucker, and a personal update on shooting high contrast monochrome JPEGs on the Leica M11 after a week in Prague. We also answer a question about having a co-host, and I finish by lobbing an ex-Army hand grenade at a stubborn myth: expensive gear will not make you a better street photographer. If you’ve got thoughts, record a short voice note and send it over, then subscribe, share the show with a mate, and leave a review so more street shooters can find us.
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    LINKS FROM TODAY'S SHOW:
    StreetSnappers workshops
    Klick Magazine: https://www.klickmagazine.com
    Brian's email: brian@streetsnappers.com
  • StreetSnappers - The Street Photography Podcast

    From North Wales to Noir: Street photography with Neil Johansson

    10/06/2026 | 40 mins.
    Click here to EMAIL BRIAN with your questions, comments and suggestions for the show!
    Prague is calling, my bag is getting packed, and I’m thinking about the kind of street photography that actually says something about modern cities. Over-tourism is one of those subjects that’s both visually rich and slightly grim: tacky souvenir shops, tourist menus, crowded streets, and a place that starts to feel like a theme park for weekenders. It’s great for photographs, but it raises bigger questions about what gets lost when a city becomes a product. 

    Before I hit the road, I sit down with Neil Johansson, a street photographer I’ve watched grow for over a decade. Neil is a passionate amateur with a seriously distinctive eye: conceptual, often abstract, and strongly rooted in black and white. We talk about how his work took shape, from early photography at school through a key Royal Photographic Society competition result and the Goldsmiths International Urban Photography Summer School. We also get into influences done properly: taking inspiration from photographers like Saul Leiter and Daido Moriyama, plus cinema and art, while still making images that feel like yours rather than a tribute act. 

    You’ll hear practical, grounded ideas on finding your voice, shooting without an agenda, and why long-term projects can be the difference between coming home empty-handed and building real bodies of work. Neil shares what he’s working on now, how he thinks about zines and books, why competitions can be a numbers game, and how printing changes your relationship with your own photographs. We even detour into camera collecting, Ricoh GR love, and the pull of monochrome. Subscribe, share the show with a photographer friend, and leave a review telling us what you’re shooting next.
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    LINKS FROM TODAY'S SHOW:
    Neil's Instagram
    Neil's website
    StreetSnappers workshops
  • StreetSnappers - The Street Photography Podcast

    Creative shock therapy, aspect ratios, my workflow, street portraits - and why Lisbon?

    26/05/2026 | 41 mins.
    Click here to EMAIL BRIAN with your questions, comments and suggestions for the show!
    London can make you feel like you have lost your eye. You walk for days, you chase the same old 'street moments', and somehow the city gives you nothing back. We talk candidly about that exact feeling and why it is not just a bad patch, it can be a sign that your work needs a real change. The big question I keep returning to is simple: if you do what you have always done, will you get what you've always got?

    To jolt the creativity back into motion, Imake a serious commitment: from 1 July I am shooting black and white only, on a 28mm lens only, for at least six months. No colour. No swapping focal lengths. Just one tight creative constraint designed to change how I really notice light, shape, gesture and composition. If you have been stuck with street photography, documentary photography, or your personal projects, this is a practical experiment you can borrow.

    I also answer listener questions with a no-nonsense post-shoot workflow: importing and culling fast in Photo Mechanic, embedding copyright and keyword metadata for archiving and SEO, then doing only basic darkroom-style edits in Adobe Camera Raw or Photoshop.
    From there we jump into one of my favourite photo books, Sergio Larrain’s 'London 1959', I share thoughts on cropping and aspect ratios  and I have a big rant about empty street portraits made without purpose. Finally, we head to Lisbon with a detailed street photography guide covering light, neighbourhoods and how to get around.

    Thanks for tuning into the StreetSnappers Street Photography Podcast. Do subscribe for the next show, share this with a photographer who feels stuck, and, if it resonates, leave a review so more people can find the podcast.
    LINKS:
    Sergio Larrain's book 'London 1959' - here
    Subscribe to Brian's street photography newsletter - here
    Book a street photography workshop with Brian - www.streetsnappers.com
  • StreetSnappers - The Street Photography Podcast

    Why shoot square? Should you join the RPS? Why does the right camera make you shoot more?

    12/05/2026 | 26 mins.
    Click here to EMAIL BRIAN with your questions, comments and suggestions for the show!
    The camera that improves your street photography might not be the newest, fastest, or most expensive, it is the one you cannot stop picking up. We dig into what makes certain cameras feel 'alive' in the hand, why that emotional pull leads to more shooting, and how early experiences with classics like the Zorki 4, Rolleiflex, and old-school rangefinders can shape the way we see. If you have ever wondered why a Leica or a Fujifilm X100 feels different, we get into the real reason without drowning in tech.

    From there, we tackle a question that keeps coming up for UK photographers: is the Royal Photographic Society (RPS) worth it for street photography? We share a straw poll of member experiences, including distinctions like LRPS and ARPS, the value of groups and days out, and the frustrations that can come with cost, access, and judging. The takeaway is practical: match your membership to your goals, and be clear whether you want structured progression or freedom to build your own projects.

    We also get hands-on with the everyday kit that keeps you moving: wrist straps versus neck straps, what to prioritise for comfort and speed, and a useful London stop for coffee when you need to reset mid-shoot. Then comes a frank rant about street photography Facebook groups, why low standards get rewarded, and why smaller, critique-led communities often produce better work.

    Finally, we make a strong case for shooting square. The 1:1 format changes pacing, simplifies clutter, makes the centre powerful, and can shift the emotional tone of your images. Try a square project on your next walk, then subscribe, share, and leave a review if it helps. What camera, group, or format has genuinely made your street photography better?

    SHOW LINKS:
    Wotancraft straps & bags  www.wotancraft.tw
    Check out my workshops  www.streetsnappers.com
    Watch my YouTube videos www.youtube.com/streetsnappers
    Follow me on Instagram www.instagram.com/streetsnappers
    Join the Facebook Community - www.facebook.com/groups/streetsnappersworldwide
  • StreetSnappers - The Street Photography Podcast

    Street Photography Ethics - a Commonsense Guide

    30/04/2026 | 34 mins.
    Click here to EMAIL BRIAN with your questions, comments and suggestions for the show!
    Street photography ethics
    Street photography is supposed to be about real life, but the moment you point a camera at a stranger, you step onto an ethical fault line. We wanted to tackle the questions that make people defensive, angry, or quietly unsure: when is candid photography fair, when is it intrusive, and when does a “great shot” come at someone else’s expense?

    We dig into consent as the core dilemma and break it into something more usable: implicit consent in public space, post-shoot consent through engagement, and explicit consent when you ask up front. We also talk about the gap between what’s legal in the UK and what feels right, especially when a photograph removes someone’s agency even if the law allows it. From there, we take listener questions and get frank about exploitation: photographing homelessness, distress, or vulnerability can either serve a genuine documentary purpose or slip into aestheticising hardship for attention.

    Context is the hidden trap. A street photograph can be “true” and still misrepresent through framing, timing, cropping, sequencing, and captions, and once an image is online you lose control over how it is read. We also look at cultural sensitivity when travelling, the risks of 'othering', and why photographing children demands a higher standard because safeguarding and downstream use matter as much as the click itself. We wrap with the point that keeps resurfacing: intent matters, but impact is what the subject lives with.

    If you’ve ever hesitated before taking a shot or second-guessed one afterwards, you’ll find practical ways to think it through. Subscribe, share the episode with a photographer friend, and leave a review, then tell us where your own ethical line sits.
    Check out my workshops  www.streetsnappers.com
    Watch my YouTube videos www.youtube.com/streetsnappers
    Follow me on Instagram www.instagram.com/streetsnappers
    Join the Facebook Community - www.facebook.com/groups/streetsnappersworldwide
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About StreetSnappers - The Street Photography Podcast
The Street Photography Podcast with Brian Lloyd Duckett of StreetSnappers.Episodes will feature interviews, tips, techniques, Q&A, book reviews, just a little gear talk and news, developments and insights from the world of documentary and street photography.Please see my website: https://www.streetsnappers.com
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