Daniel J. Schneider

The good, the bad and the group photo walk

Photo walker and her shadow
A photo walk participant and her shadow in Civic Center Park, Denver. Seeing how others work can be inspiring or informative. (Daniel J. Schneider)

Photowalking has become a pretty big business in the last decade or so, as semi-professional digital camera prices have come within reach of more and more people.

It seems that they also satisfy the oft-repeated advice to get out there and take pictures. Frequently this is the advice touted as most important when someone is getting started, and certainly it’s very important. As with any craft, the only way to improve is to practice, practice, practice.

And when you get the photographer’s equivalent of writer’s block (shooter’s block? lensman’s block? Monday?), a photo walk can be one way to re-start that creative engine by immersing yourself in new surroundings or by getting a different perspective on a place you know.

A garage with a peaked roof and a mint-green 1973 Ford Maverick off of an alleyway in Denver’s Berkeley Highlands neighborhood. (Daniel J. Schneider)

But of course there’s a lot more to it than just pressing the shutter release. You can certainly work on “seeing differently” on a photo walk, and definitely use it as an excuse to “just shoot everything.” These types of advice work great in the digital world, but they can get expensive if you’re a film photographer.

At this point I’m still pretty happy when more than 25% of what I shoot yields good negatives I wouldn’t be embarrassed to print or scan and subsequently show to someone. With the price of film and developing (which is pennies if you do it yourself), that still winds up costing me a buck a frame with 35mm film. It can go up to $2-3 a frame with medium format. Double those figures for color negative film, and triple them for chromes.

So I’m not terribly sure a photo walk is always the best idea.

Now, I actually do it pretty often on my own. A lot of my camera testing is done by way of solo photo walks on 16th Street Mall, or in Capitol Hill or another of Denver’s historic districts or neighbohoods. I’ve only participated in a few group photo walks ever, though, and they’ve left me with mixed feelings.

So that’s what I was talking about above, really — group photo walks. They can go well or badly, and can help or hurt you. Especially if you shoot film.

A man out walking pauses to stretch in Civic Center Park on the steps of the Greek Amphitheater just before sunset. (Daniel J. Schneider)

Large group

I think the first group photo walk I ever went on was when Trey Ratcliff led a walk in Denver last summer. Ratcliff is a noted travel photographer, educator and frequent photo walk leader. In fact, he’s doing a big photo walk tour of the U.S. right now.

I heard about the walk via Twitter and had no other plans that night. I’d never heard of Ratcliff prior to that day. I had no idea what it would be like. It wasn’t hard to find, though — the crowd was sizable.

Seal Fountain at the Voorhies Memorial in Denver’s Civic Center Park, taken during a group photo walk. Notice the crowd… (Daniel J. Schneider)

Ratcliff has really taken to digital photography (I don’t know if or how long he used film before switching) and his work is colorful and seems, to me, to lean heavily on the types of minor manipulation that Photoshop and Lightroom, and other software, have made so easy today.

Of course, I was the only person there shooting film — which I’m used to. A lot of people asked me about it. I felt a little mobbed a couple times, but the attention was good attention — very positive energy, etc.

Ratcliff planned a simple route around the Denver Art Museum, through Civic Center Park and back down Bannock Street through the Golden Triangle. All this ground is pretty familiar to me, so I didn’t feel terribly inspired by the scenery, but did find some things to photograph and maybe learned a couple things.

The group was big — probably too big — which presented communication challenges for Ratcliff, and a variety of other minor complications. Everyone seemed very happy to b there, though.

One of the things most memorable for me was helping out other photographers. One novice who’d gotten a new-to-him DSLR couldn’t figure out the menu system to adjust white balance settings, file quality, etc. Working together with another couple photographers, we managed to jointly figure most of it out.

Later, a young woman came to me with questions about the exposure triangle. She’d never used anything but program mode and had overheard me talking about aperture priority and shooting all manual (I had taken my Nikon FM2 kit and had no automatic exposure). We had a good conversation and I saw her have that “A-ha!” moment where it all clicked. I felt really good about that.

The ceiling of the carousel building at the site of the former Elitch Gardens in Denver. It housed a three-abreast Philadelphia Toboggan Company carousel for 88 years before the park moved to central Denver. (Daniel J. Schneider)

Small group

Last fall, a few followers of the Twitter hashtag #believeinfilm, myself included, met up in Denver’s West Highland neighborhood for a bit of a photo walk. There were only four of us, though, which was very manageable and made it much more a social outing.

Benefits of a small-group photo walk: catching people unawares and not as part of a herd. Sunset highlights, too. (Daniel J. Schneider)

I suppose that’s what a group photo walk should be, really — a social outing. If your goal is to meet other photographers, you probably can’t go wrong with a group photo walk.

Heck, that little film photo walk was where I met @shootfilmride, and later led to the aircraft salvage yard where we both met Craig Pindell, and ultimately to the collaboration the three of us are working on now.

Another thing I have decided I like about group photo walks is the ability to see other photographers working. Sure, I can look at their photos of things I know and try to reconstruct where they stood and why they shot from high or low, etc. But watching them choose their subject and figure out how they want to shoot it seems more instructive and can be inspirational.

A battered but character-rich cycle rickshaw adorns the sidewalk outside of Swing Thai on Tennyson Street in Denver’s Berkeley Highlands neighborhood. (Daniel J. Schneider)

Without further ado, here are my lists of the good and the bad in regard to group photo walks:

The good

These are my personal top reasons why a group photo walk might be a good thing for you, based in part on JPGmag’s top 10 list and Scott Jarvie’s article on organizing a successful group photo walk.

Denver’s Oriental Theater dates to the 1920s and is listed on the National Register of Historic Places. (Daniel J. Schneider)
Part of the the Greek Amphitheater’s architecture in Denver’s Civic Center Park as shadows stretch long. (Daniel J. Schneider)

The Bad

These are based on my own experiences. I looked for articles about others’ negative group photo walk experiences and came up empty, so these may be better thought of as things to watch out for.

Denver’s historic Evans School seen past the Denver Art Museum in the Golden Triangle neighborhood. (Daniel J. Schneider)

I guess it’s obvious now that a lot of the pros can easily become cons, and that a lot of the value and enjoyment of a group photo walk is up to you to discern.

A vintage bicycle quietly rots in a rack on Tennyson Street in Denver’s Berkeley Highlands neighborhood. (Daniel J. Schneider)

How to not suck at photo walks (with film)

Most of this advice is format agnostic, but I’m adapting it for film a bit. Loosely based on DPS’ 10 Tips for Enjoying a Photo Walk.

Pretty much all of this advice applies to solo photowalking as well as group photo walks.

A super-narrow walkway between two buildings in Denver’s Berkeley Highlands neighborhood. I wouldn’t fit down there… (Daniel J. Schneider)
The Colorado State Capitol dome as seen through the colonnade of the Greek Amphitheater in Denver’s Civic Center Park. (Daniel J. Schneider)

I hope this discussion helps you decide if a group photo walk is for you, or encourages you to give one a try if you haven’t before. If you’re going to stick with working solo, I don’t blame you one bit. But do try to find some way to get outside your comfort zone now and then.

Be safe and have fun!

A view of the Denver City and County Building from Civic Center Park, just a little bit before sunset, with photo walkers and flowers. (Daniel J. Schneider)
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