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This is more of a general observation and an attempt to analyse it. Most of the street photographs I have come across have been presented (either shot in or post processed) in B&W. Are there notable benefits of doing so other than "it-looks-nice"? Is this a best practice in street photography?

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I'm curious about this. I've never observed that they do. Can you post links to pictures/galleries that showcase B&W street photography shots? – skytreader Apr 12 '12 at 12:34
If you just search "street photography" on google images... I have added a link above nevertheless. – Chirantan Apr 12 '12 at 12:46
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I assume that in large part it is because of this. – mattdm Apr 12 '12 at 13:13
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The stock saying is 'with black and white you photograph the person, with colour you photograph their clothes' - in other words, black and white cuts down on distracting colours. – ElendilTheTall Apr 12 '12 at 13:35
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there is a saying "Photographing people in black and white capture their souls" – akram Apr 12 '12 at 14:41
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4 Answers

up vote 5 down vote accepted

When using B&W, you have decided that the colors are suppressing the subject and you want the viewer to concentrate on geometric's. But this is strictly decided by the photographer eye. A more detailed article about this subject can be found here

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I think it's also often because there can be a great many distracting elements in a street photograph - unwanted grafiti, rubbish, posters etc. By presenting the image in B&W the eye doesn't stop for long on all these other elements with their clashing colours and shapes which only serve to detract from the subject.

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I debated on whether this should be a comment or an answer...

I know a number of photographers in my area who do street photography in b&w and color. B&W is usually the style of choice for photographing the down and out people in our society such as the homeless and desperate. The reasons they use b&w (enough are acquaintances and friends for me to know their preferences) are pretty simple:

  • B&W makes it look "gritty"
  • It can hide exposure problems (blown out sections or noisy sections)
  • It creates mood and if the subject is depressing can easily contribute to that feel

Now, color always seems to be used for general street photography such as the coming and going of people through the day doing whatever they're doing. I don't usually see b&w for that.

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My 2 cents:

Usually there are many things happening on the street and the photographer usually does not have control over them. This means there will be many distractions. B&W images take care of this by atleast getting rid of the colors. ofcourse, if you have a big chimp dancing on the street and you click a picture of someone standing in the corner, the attention will still be diverted to the chimp.

Secondly, black and white adds really good contrast and makes things pop out. Also, expressions look very interesting in b&W/sepia which I believe is one of the reasons for the success of instagram.

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