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Photojournalism
Rijitha R
Assistant Professor
Department of Media Studies
PHOTOJOURNALISM
• Photojournalism is a form of journalism which tells a news story through powerful
photography which traditionally are black and white images
• Photojournalism began with the first pictures of war published in newspapers during the
Crimean War and the American Civil War. However even at this time, the image was only
there to enhance the text, not lead the story.
• Photojournalism differs from other forms of photography (e.g. documentary photography,
street photography or celebrity photography) by its need to remain honest and impartial.
• Photojournalism has been around for many decades now. It has been enhanced, and changed
by using different technologies and resources to give it capabilities that it could never achieve
before. This has changed the lives of photojournalist and photojournalism as a whole because
it has given an image more value than it just being a photograph. It has allowed images to also
tell a story that can show awareness, become relatable, and shared among individuals. So
many connections and thoughts are brought together just through photographs, giving people
a chance to express themselves through a beautiful image.
Photojournalists
• A photojournalist is someone who has a trained, artistic, and talented eye, and is able to see a
'photographic opportunity' that an untrained eye might easily overlook.
• He or she has the opportunity to change the way people view the world through their photographs,
and can show people things they've never been shown before.
• These individuals are very passionate about their work, have an amazing eye for detail, and have an
innate ability to 'see' the world around them differently than others.
• There are entire books, and even exhibitions, dedicated to the work done by incredibly talented
photojournalists.
• Photojournalists can be of two kinds, those who are employed by the newspaper and the others who
work as freelancers i.e. those who work independently and sell the pictures that they take to
newspapers and other news agencies.
• Photojournalism is now no longer limited to newspapers. With the emergence of the internet as a
major source of news, the scope of photojournalism has extended itself into what is known as web
based photo journalism. Some of you who use the internet would have seen websites that are like
newspapers. These sites also employ journalists as well as photojournalists to gather news for their
organizations.
ETHICS AND THE PHOTOJOURNALIST
• . Ethics are the moral principles that influence the conduct of people.
• Journalistic ethics are the moral principles that govern the practice of all forms of journalism.
• They guide the photojournalist in deciding what is right and what is wrong.
• Truthfulness is a core journalistic ethic.
• A photojournalist must always strive to take pictures that tell the truth.
• This issue of ethics has become more important in the digital age when it is very easy to change the
photograph on the computer.
• It is believed that the camera never lies. But now with a few clicks of a computer mouse, you can
completely change a photograph. So much so that it is no longer a record of an event.
• For example, you can show a man to be smoking even if he has never held a cigarette in life or in
the company of someone he has never met.
• You can show a crowd of people at a place when in fact there were only a few people present when
the picture was taken. You can make people appear to be standing in front of well known monuments
in foreign countries to which they have never been
ETHICS AND THE PHOTOJOURNALIST
• All manipulation of photographs is a violation of basic journalistic ethics. For the
photojournalist must capture the truth.
• This means that the photojournalist must only photograph what has happened, when it
happened and not invent a situation or recreate one by moving things around in the picture to
make it seem more interesting than it really was.
• It is also against journalistic ethics to stage or create a picture by having people pose for the
camera.
• For example if a photojournalist wants a picture of a midday meal scheme in a school he
must go to a school at meal time and take pictures of what is seen.
• These might be of food being prepared or served to the children or the children eating their
food. It would be against journalistic ethics if he were to make a group of children in school
uniform sit in rows with plates in front of them and pretend to be eating a meal at school.
• A photojournalist who takes his professional responsibilities seriously would never
manipulate an image or stage an event for the benefit of his camera.
PHOTOJOURNALISM IN INDIA
• Photography arrived in India almost within two years of its discovery.
• As India was being ruled by the British, British photographers started taking pictures of the
country, its scenery and monuments.
• When the first war of Independence happened in 1857, it was one of the first incidents of
war photography in the world and you may have seen some photographs in magazines.
• Later on when the camera became smaller, photojournalism gained greater popularity.
• Many political developments were also taking place in India especially around the freedom
movement.
• All this gave a lot of chance to photojournalists to take pictures. Raja Deen Dayal was one of
the first notable Indian photojournalists.
• He was a court photographer in India during the rule of the sixth Nizam of Hyderabad. As
he was the only native photographer, he has left behind a very impressive record of British
India.
• Among the famous photojournalists who worked then was Sunil Janah.
• A political activist and journalist, Sunil Janah began to photograph while writing assignments for his
newspaper.
• At the time of India’s independence, Janah photographed the significant events in the country and
made a record of the transition from British rule to independent India.
• His photographs of India’s partition, its people; specially the tribals as well as pictures of
industries and temple structures are very famous.
• Photographs of Nehru and Gandhi by Sunil Janah are now seen by us everywhere. Photograph taken
by Sunil Janah There is another name which needs a special mention here, also because in a
profession dominated by men, she was the first woman photojournalist. She is Homai Vyarawalla.
Her work was first published in 1938 in the Bombay Chronicle, and later in other major
publications of those times. She also worked for the Illustrated Weekly of India and during World
War II covered every aspect of wartime activities in India.
• Her documentation of the events of the freedom movement are significant. She remained a freelance
photographer until 1970 and was highly respected amongst all photojournalists
• There are several international photojournalists who loved photographing in India. Amongst
them, the name of Henri Cartier Bresson is famous. Henri Cartier Bresson was French and
his name is counted amongst the best photojournalists of the world. He travelled in India in
the 1940s and then kept coming back here in later years. His most famous photograph is that
of Pandit Jawaharlal Nehru announcing the death of Gandhiji. His book called ‘Henri
Cartier Bresson in India’ is very well known.
• Prashant Panjiar is another successful photojournalist of the present times. Born in Kolkata,
he is a self taught photographer who has worked for many magazines in Delhi. His most
successful career was with the ‘Outlook’ magazine as its chief photographer and associate
editor. He is a founding member of this magazine and through his photographs, he gave it a
popular appeal among people and now Outlook has become a leading news magazine in India.
• With the improvement in printing technology, newspapers have started using more photos and
in colour. This has given rise to a greater demand for trained people in the field of
photojournalism.
TYPES OF PHOTOJOURNALISM
• Sports photojournalism:
As sports events are a big part of news, there are photojournalists who specialize in
photographing sports. This is also because sports photography requires a specialised skill as
well as equipment. Nowadays there are photojournalists who specialise in photographing
individual sports. For example in India, there are photojournalists who are dedicated to cricket
photography as it is the most popular sport and is now played throughout the year irrespective
of it being day or night.
• War photojournalism:
This is the earliest form of photojournalism, where photojournalists have covered wars and sent
photos from the centre of action. In India we see a lot of photographs in newspapers, of
conflicts within the country such a terrorist activity or a riot where the photographer is in a
dangerous situation and yet he manages to send us pictures, risking his life.
• Glamour photojournalism:
Film stars and other famous personalities have become a major part of news coverage as most
people want to peep into the lives of the rich and famous. There are photojournalists who
specialise in this kind of photography only are also called paparazzi, which is an Italian word.
• Spot news photojournalism:
This means to day news, like political events, crime, accidents etc. This is in fact the most
common type of photojournalism and is most demanding for a photojournalist covering
events that make day
• Travel photojournalism:
This type of photojournalism involves the documentation of an area’s landscape, people, cultures,
customs and history. Travel photographs are taken by professionals or even amateurs.
Photographs taken by amateurs are shared online with friends, relatives etc through photo
sharing websites.
• Wildlife photojournalism :
This is regarded as one of the more challenging forms of photojournalism. Advanced photographic
equipment as well as a good knowledge of the animal’s behaviour as well as the terrain is
needed to take wildlife photographs.
Ten Practical Principles for
Photojournalists
1. Get in close.
Your photos will often be published on low-quality newsprint for a jaded audience easily
distracted. Detail gets lost. Photos strong enough to break through the media competition
focus on a single, frame-filling center of interest. Generally no more than two or three people.
No more than a few objects. A clean, contrasting background. Sometimes photojournalists call
this the "poster effect." This is why telephoto or zoom lenses are the workhorses of
photojournalism: many photojournalists don't even use a normal perspective (35-50mm) lens.
If you can't get in close, crop ruthlessly."If your pictures aren't good enough, you're not close
enough."--Robert Capa, one of the century's top war photographers (killed by land mine while
trying to get in close).
2. Find unusual angles.
If you're sitting or standing like everyone else, you're probably going to take back some blah
photos. Kneel. Climb on a chair. Crouch. Lie down. Shoot down a stairway. Get off your butt.
Good photojournalists are always
3. Get identification.
All subjects easily identifiable must be named. Journalism is about people, not abstract art.
Most editors will reject photos without indents, unless they are used as generic illustrations.
Beginners are intimidated by walking up to strangers, but it's not really very hard. Simply say
some variation of, "Hi, my name is Irving Nern, with the Spectrum. I just took your picture,
and I wonder if I can have your name? Can you spell that, please?" Write names in
your Reporters' Notebook. Few people will turn you down: Americans love to be in pictures.
4. Burn pixels.
Move in, move out, move high, move low, and keep on clicking. You'll have more to choose
from, and you'll more likely have a strong image. Unlike studio photographers,
photojournalists have to nab action as it's unfolding, so at least to some extent are forced to
trust on luck to bring back good pictures. The old film rule used to be to shoot one roll (24
ex.) minimum at any event you're asked to cover, even a speaker at a podium. You can
interpret this in the digital age. Half a football game should bag you 75 photos at least. How
are you going to have any choice at all if you return to the office with a mere four shots?
Pixels are free!
5. Go beyond the cliché.
How many photos have you seen showing people talking on a phone? Working at a computer? At a
desk with books in the background? Making a lay-up to a basketball hoop? For goodness' sake,
promise yourself NEVER to take a photo like this again!
6. Avoid obvious posing.
Okay, sometimes you have to ask people to stand someplace or do something, but that still doesn't
mean they have to just grin into the camera. Try to make the scene appear natural, as if the subject
were involved in something and the photographer just happened to come by. Photojournalism aims
to cover people doing things, not people posing. That's for the studio photographers.
7. Add light, but don't make it obvious.
Available light is ideal, but usually its quality is hardly that. Especially when you're shooting color,
you need to control the color balance of garish green florescent, or difficult combinations of artificial
and natural light. In some cases, light comes from ugly angles (such as nearly every standard
classroom or office), or is so weak you can't even get close to stopping the action.
The normal approach is to carry a portable electronic flash, but NEVER to merely attach it to the hot
shoe and blast away. That looks 'way too artificial. Solution: bounce. Aim your electronic flash
straight up. Tape a piece of white cardboard at an angle so the light bounces up and off the
cardboard. Adjust for your available light exposure, perhaps underexposing a stop. The added flash
will fill in the ugly shadows, but still maintain a feeling of natural light.
This is harder if your light is primarily florescent, as your bluish flash will clash with the greenish
ambient light, but you should be able to adjust most color cast problems fairly easily in Photoshop.
When all else fails, at least take your flash off your camera, hold it a few inches away, and shoot
directly.
• 8. Focus faithfully, stay steady.
You just cannot use a blurry photo in a publication: any slight fuzziness will be enhanced by poor
quality paper and fast reproduction. Most fuzzy photos can be blamed on camera movement. If
you're naturally jittery, get help: buy a mini tripod and lean it on your chest, or buy a monopod and
lean it on the ground. In a pinch, lean against a tree or wall. Rule of thumb: any shutter speed more
than one stop lower than the size of your lens will produce a fuzzy picture, unless you use a
mechanical aid. This means If you're shooting at about 50mm or equivalent, you can't hand-hold
anything slower than 1/30 second. If you're shooting with a zoom set at 200 mm, 1/125 is the limit.
And this really is the limit: you must make like a rock to get sharp images even at this speed. (The
older you get the harder that gets, by the way. I used to hand-hold 1/15 second. Not anymore....)
Photoshop's blur filter can sharpen pixels, but can do only so much (or usually not so much) with
pictures that were originally blurry.
Image stabilization in some modern lenses may help steady your camera for slower exposures. But
don't forget to pay attention to your auto focus. Is it actually focusing on the center of interest? I
have found auto focus to give me the wrong setting at least a quarter of the time, and it hardly works
at all in low light.
Conclusion: automatic cameras are wonderful devices, but you need to be aware of your settings,
shutter speed, f/stop and focus.
9. Dump poorly exposed photos.
Got a great shot, but the guy's face is in deep shadow? Got a great expression on that cute kid,
but a telephone pole is growing out of her head? What about that nice little blurry photo of the
sorority sisters' car wash? DO NOT submit poorly exposed photos for publication, no matter
how much you like the image. On the other hand, BE CAREFUL to expose correctly.
Automatic cameras are usually smarter than we are, but not always. Study principles of proper
exposure. It's still hard to fix up poorly exposed images, even with Photoshop software: you
can't add detail when nothing's there to begin with.
10. Have guts.
Walk up to 10 people on the street, snap their picture, ask for their name, write it down. Get a
floor pass to a rock concert (and wear earplugs!). Walk as close to the sports action as you
dare--get a press pass if you need one. Look for interesting expressions after the posed shots
are done. Get out there and shoot! Photojournalists are to a person not to be counted among
the timid. Sure, you can overdo this--harassing paparazzi spring to mind--but a courteous,
assertive demeanor is nothing to be ashamed of.
RECENT PHOTOJOURNALIST
• Arati Kumar-Rao @aratikumarrao
Arati Kumar-Rao is an environmental photographer and journalist. Her instagram feed is a
visual documentation of the interdependence of the environment and human beings. In River
Diaries, she documents the affects of changing land and river use on neighboring
communities. She even runs a second account @environmentalrefugees, where she compiles
the stories of people she has encountered who have been displaced from their homes due to
growing environmental degradation, and the encroachment of development projects onto their
land. They are left without work and homes as they are forced to migrate.
“These victims of, what Rob Nixon first termed quite aptly, #SlowViolence, become even
more vulnerable when you layer on the increasing unpredictability of weather patterns. I hope
in the collecting and telling of stories of these Environmental Refugees, we can eventually --
collectively -- push for mitigating impact on them, right planning, and if it must come to that,
just rehabilitation,” reads her poignant description of this second account on instagram.
• Adnan Abidi @adnanabidi
In a variety of colours and across various landscapes, exist the images taken by Adnan
Abidi using just his iPhone. Based in New Delhi, Abidi is a self-taught photojournalist
with Reuters and has covered various world events from the 1999 Kandahar hijack of an
Indian Airlines flight, to the Kashmir earthquake in 2005, among several others. The
features on his Instagram feed give you a behind-the-scenes look into his wanderings as a
photojournalist on assignments, as he interacts with various people and cultures.
• Anil Sharma @anilsharma07
On Anil Sharma’s page, some of the country’s biggest social and political events are
captured with seeming ease. Working as a photojournalist with the Indian Express has given
him access to avenues unavailable to the common man and he often presents famous
personalities, such as Rahul Gandhi and Sachin Tendulkar, to name a few, in a more
humanized and relatable in form; capturing their more spontaneous, intimate, and real
moments.
• Anushree Fadnavis @anushree_fadnavis
• A photojournalist with Indus Images, Mumbai based Anushree Fadnavis is passionate about
photography and finds joy in the little things. For her, every image tells a story and in
her #traindiaries project she captures the stories of travelers in the women’s compartment
of the local trains in Mumbai.
• Energetic children with their tired mothers, women selling a variety of products; books, hair
clips or snacks, some seeking alms; transgender women wary of getting their pictures taken
and groups of women who’ve befriended each other being daily travellers. Her images have a
sense of joviality and vitality to them, even a hint of nostalgia as you think back to your
school and college commutes.
• Chandan Khanna @khannachandan
The work of Agence France-Presse (AFP) photojournalist Chandan Khanna captures the
best of India and the daily lives of its people, cultures and places. Based in New Delhi, his
Instagram feed is a delight to go through as he balances vibrant colours and the mundane; the
struggles and frivolity of youth and old age; #dailylife is probably his most popular hashtag.
The serene and the dynamic are juxtaposed showcasing various facets of the country. Using
an iPhone, he covers subjects ranging from the frantic streets of Delhi to the banks of the
river Ganga. He also runs @peopleofdelhi, a series of striking monochromatic portraits of the
inhabitants of Delhi.
THE END

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Photojournalism

  • 2. PHOTOJOURNALISM • Photojournalism is a form of journalism which tells a news story through powerful photography which traditionally are black and white images • Photojournalism began with the first pictures of war published in newspapers during the Crimean War and the American Civil War. However even at this time, the image was only there to enhance the text, not lead the story. • Photojournalism differs from other forms of photography (e.g. documentary photography, street photography or celebrity photography) by its need to remain honest and impartial. • Photojournalism has been around for many decades now. It has been enhanced, and changed by using different technologies and resources to give it capabilities that it could never achieve before. This has changed the lives of photojournalist and photojournalism as a whole because it has given an image more value than it just being a photograph. It has allowed images to also tell a story that can show awareness, become relatable, and shared among individuals. So many connections and thoughts are brought together just through photographs, giving people a chance to express themselves through a beautiful image.
  • 3. Photojournalists • A photojournalist is someone who has a trained, artistic, and talented eye, and is able to see a 'photographic opportunity' that an untrained eye might easily overlook. • He or she has the opportunity to change the way people view the world through their photographs, and can show people things they've never been shown before. • These individuals are very passionate about their work, have an amazing eye for detail, and have an innate ability to 'see' the world around them differently than others. • There are entire books, and even exhibitions, dedicated to the work done by incredibly talented photojournalists. • Photojournalists can be of two kinds, those who are employed by the newspaper and the others who work as freelancers i.e. those who work independently and sell the pictures that they take to newspapers and other news agencies. • Photojournalism is now no longer limited to newspapers. With the emergence of the internet as a major source of news, the scope of photojournalism has extended itself into what is known as web based photo journalism. Some of you who use the internet would have seen websites that are like newspapers. These sites also employ journalists as well as photojournalists to gather news for their organizations.
  • 4. ETHICS AND THE PHOTOJOURNALIST • . Ethics are the moral principles that influence the conduct of people. • Journalistic ethics are the moral principles that govern the practice of all forms of journalism. • They guide the photojournalist in deciding what is right and what is wrong. • Truthfulness is a core journalistic ethic. • A photojournalist must always strive to take pictures that tell the truth. • This issue of ethics has become more important in the digital age when it is very easy to change the photograph on the computer. • It is believed that the camera never lies. But now with a few clicks of a computer mouse, you can completely change a photograph. So much so that it is no longer a record of an event. • For example, you can show a man to be smoking even if he has never held a cigarette in life or in the company of someone he has never met. • You can show a crowd of people at a place when in fact there were only a few people present when the picture was taken. You can make people appear to be standing in front of well known monuments in foreign countries to which they have never been
  • 5. ETHICS AND THE PHOTOJOURNALIST • All manipulation of photographs is a violation of basic journalistic ethics. For the photojournalist must capture the truth. • This means that the photojournalist must only photograph what has happened, when it happened and not invent a situation or recreate one by moving things around in the picture to make it seem more interesting than it really was. • It is also against journalistic ethics to stage or create a picture by having people pose for the camera. • For example if a photojournalist wants a picture of a midday meal scheme in a school he must go to a school at meal time and take pictures of what is seen. • These might be of food being prepared or served to the children or the children eating their food. It would be against journalistic ethics if he were to make a group of children in school uniform sit in rows with plates in front of them and pretend to be eating a meal at school. • A photojournalist who takes his professional responsibilities seriously would never manipulate an image or stage an event for the benefit of his camera.
  • 6. PHOTOJOURNALISM IN INDIA • Photography arrived in India almost within two years of its discovery. • As India was being ruled by the British, British photographers started taking pictures of the country, its scenery and monuments. • When the first war of Independence happened in 1857, it was one of the first incidents of war photography in the world and you may have seen some photographs in magazines. • Later on when the camera became smaller, photojournalism gained greater popularity. • Many political developments were also taking place in India especially around the freedom movement. • All this gave a lot of chance to photojournalists to take pictures. Raja Deen Dayal was one of the first notable Indian photojournalists. • He was a court photographer in India during the rule of the sixth Nizam of Hyderabad. As he was the only native photographer, he has left behind a very impressive record of British India.
  • 7. • Among the famous photojournalists who worked then was Sunil Janah. • A political activist and journalist, Sunil Janah began to photograph while writing assignments for his newspaper. • At the time of India’s independence, Janah photographed the significant events in the country and made a record of the transition from British rule to independent India. • His photographs of India’s partition, its people; specially the tribals as well as pictures of industries and temple structures are very famous. • Photographs of Nehru and Gandhi by Sunil Janah are now seen by us everywhere. Photograph taken by Sunil Janah There is another name which needs a special mention here, also because in a profession dominated by men, she was the first woman photojournalist. She is Homai Vyarawalla. Her work was first published in 1938 in the Bombay Chronicle, and later in other major publications of those times. She also worked for the Illustrated Weekly of India and during World War II covered every aspect of wartime activities in India. • Her documentation of the events of the freedom movement are significant. She remained a freelance photographer until 1970 and was highly respected amongst all photojournalists
  • 8. • There are several international photojournalists who loved photographing in India. Amongst them, the name of Henri Cartier Bresson is famous. Henri Cartier Bresson was French and his name is counted amongst the best photojournalists of the world. He travelled in India in the 1940s and then kept coming back here in later years. His most famous photograph is that of Pandit Jawaharlal Nehru announcing the death of Gandhiji. His book called ‘Henri Cartier Bresson in India’ is very well known. • Prashant Panjiar is another successful photojournalist of the present times. Born in Kolkata, he is a self taught photographer who has worked for many magazines in Delhi. His most successful career was with the ‘Outlook’ magazine as its chief photographer and associate editor. He is a founding member of this magazine and through his photographs, he gave it a popular appeal among people and now Outlook has become a leading news magazine in India. • With the improvement in printing technology, newspapers have started using more photos and in colour. This has given rise to a greater demand for trained people in the field of photojournalism.
  • 9. TYPES OF PHOTOJOURNALISM • Sports photojournalism: As sports events are a big part of news, there are photojournalists who specialize in photographing sports. This is also because sports photography requires a specialised skill as well as equipment. Nowadays there are photojournalists who specialise in photographing individual sports. For example in India, there are photojournalists who are dedicated to cricket photography as it is the most popular sport and is now played throughout the year irrespective of it being day or night.
  • 10.
  • 11. • War photojournalism: This is the earliest form of photojournalism, where photojournalists have covered wars and sent photos from the centre of action. In India we see a lot of photographs in newspapers, of conflicts within the country such a terrorist activity or a riot where the photographer is in a dangerous situation and yet he manages to send us pictures, risking his life.
  • 12.
  • 13. • Glamour photojournalism: Film stars and other famous personalities have become a major part of news coverage as most people want to peep into the lives of the rich and famous. There are photojournalists who specialise in this kind of photography only are also called paparazzi, which is an Italian word.
  • 14. • Spot news photojournalism: This means to day news, like political events, crime, accidents etc. This is in fact the most common type of photojournalism and is most demanding for a photojournalist covering events that make day
  • 15. • Travel photojournalism: This type of photojournalism involves the documentation of an area’s landscape, people, cultures, customs and history. Travel photographs are taken by professionals or even amateurs. Photographs taken by amateurs are shared online with friends, relatives etc through photo sharing websites.
  • 16. • Wildlife photojournalism : This is regarded as one of the more challenging forms of photojournalism. Advanced photographic equipment as well as a good knowledge of the animal’s behaviour as well as the terrain is needed to take wildlife photographs.
  • 17. Ten Practical Principles for Photojournalists 1. Get in close. Your photos will often be published on low-quality newsprint for a jaded audience easily distracted. Detail gets lost. Photos strong enough to break through the media competition focus on a single, frame-filling center of interest. Generally no more than two or three people. No more than a few objects. A clean, contrasting background. Sometimes photojournalists call this the "poster effect." This is why telephoto or zoom lenses are the workhorses of photojournalism: many photojournalists don't even use a normal perspective (35-50mm) lens. If you can't get in close, crop ruthlessly."If your pictures aren't good enough, you're not close enough."--Robert Capa, one of the century's top war photographers (killed by land mine while trying to get in close).
  • 18. 2. Find unusual angles. If you're sitting or standing like everyone else, you're probably going to take back some blah photos. Kneel. Climb on a chair. Crouch. Lie down. Shoot down a stairway. Get off your butt. Good photojournalists are always 3. Get identification. All subjects easily identifiable must be named. Journalism is about people, not abstract art. Most editors will reject photos without indents, unless they are used as generic illustrations. Beginners are intimidated by walking up to strangers, but it's not really very hard. Simply say some variation of, "Hi, my name is Irving Nern, with the Spectrum. I just took your picture, and I wonder if I can have your name? Can you spell that, please?" Write names in your Reporters' Notebook. Few people will turn you down: Americans love to be in pictures. 4. Burn pixels. Move in, move out, move high, move low, and keep on clicking. You'll have more to choose from, and you'll more likely have a strong image. Unlike studio photographers, photojournalists have to nab action as it's unfolding, so at least to some extent are forced to trust on luck to bring back good pictures. The old film rule used to be to shoot one roll (24 ex.) minimum at any event you're asked to cover, even a speaker at a podium. You can interpret this in the digital age. Half a football game should bag you 75 photos at least. How are you going to have any choice at all if you return to the office with a mere four shots? Pixels are free!
  • 19. 5. Go beyond the cliché. How many photos have you seen showing people talking on a phone? Working at a computer? At a desk with books in the background? Making a lay-up to a basketball hoop? For goodness' sake, promise yourself NEVER to take a photo like this again! 6. Avoid obvious posing. Okay, sometimes you have to ask people to stand someplace or do something, but that still doesn't mean they have to just grin into the camera. Try to make the scene appear natural, as if the subject were involved in something and the photographer just happened to come by. Photojournalism aims to cover people doing things, not people posing. That's for the studio photographers. 7. Add light, but don't make it obvious. Available light is ideal, but usually its quality is hardly that. Especially when you're shooting color, you need to control the color balance of garish green florescent, or difficult combinations of artificial and natural light. In some cases, light comes from ugly angles (such as nearly every standard classroom or office), or is so weak you can't even get close to stopping the action. The normal approach is to carry a portable electronic flash, but NEVER to merely attach it to the hot shoe and blast away. That looks 'way too artificial. Solution: bounce. Aim your electronic flash straight up. Tape a piece of white cardboard at an angle so the light bounces up and off the cardboard. Adjust for your available light exposure, perhaps underexposing a stop. The added flash will fill in the ugly shadows, but still maintain a feeling of natural light. This is harder if your light is primarily florescent, as your bluish flash will clash with the greenish ambient light, but you should be able to adjust most color cast problems fairly easily in Photoshop. When all else fails, at least take your flash off your camera, hold it a few inches away, and shoot directly.
  • 20. • 8. Focus faithfully, stay steady. You just cannot use a blurry photo in a publication: any slight fuzziness will be enhanced by poor quality paper and fast reproduction. Most fuzzy photos can be blamed on camera movement. If you're naturally jittery, get help: buy a mini tripod and lean it on your chest, or buy a monopod and lean it on the ground. In a pinch, lean against a tree or wall. Rule of thumb: any shutter speed more than one stop lower than the size of your lens will produce a fuzzy picture, unless you use a mechanical aid. This means If you're shooting at about 50mm or equivalent, you can't hand-hold anything slower than 1/30 second. If you're shooting with a zoom set at 200 mm, 1/125 is the limit. And this really is the limit: you must make like a rock to get sharp images even at this speed. (The older you get the harder that gets, by the way. I used to hand-hold 1/15 second. Not anymore....) Photoshop's blur filter can sharpen pixels, but can do only so much (or usually not so much) with pictures that were originally blurry. Image stabilization in some modern lenses may help steady your camera for slower exposures. But don't forget to pay attention to your auto focus. Is it actually focusing on the center of interest? I have found auto focus to give me the wrong setting at least a quarter of the time, and it hardly works at all in low light. Conclusion: automatic cameras are wonderful devices, but you need to be aware of your settings, shutter speed, f/stop and focus.
  • 21. 9. Dump poorly exposed photos. Got a great shot, but the guy's face is in deep shadow? Got a great expression on that cute kid, but a telephone pole is growing out of her head? What about that nice little blurry photo of the sorority sisters' car wash? DO NOT submit poorly exposed photos for publication, no matter how much you like the image. On the other hand, BE CAREFUL to expose correctly. Automatic cameras are usually smarter than we are, but not always. Study principles of proper exposure. It's still hard to fix up poorly exposed images, even with Photoshop software: you can't add detail when nothing's there to begin with. 10. Have guts. Walk up to 10 people on the street, snap their picture, ask for their name, write it down. Get a floor pass to a rock concert (and wear earplugs!). Walk as close to the sports action as you dare--get a press pass if you need one. Look for interesting expressions after the posed shots are done. Get out there and shoot! Photojournalists are to a person not to be counted among the timid. Sure, you can overdo this--harassing paparazzi spring to mind--but a courteous, assertive demeanor is nothing to be ashamed of.
  • 22. RECENT PHOTOJOURNALIST • Arati Kumar-Rao @aratikumarrao Arati Kumar-Rao is an environmental photographer and journalist. Her instagram feed is a visual documentation of the interdependence of the environment and human beings. In River Diaries, she documents the affects of changing land and river use on neighboring communities. She even runs a second account @environmentalrefugees, where she compiles the stories of people she has encountered who have been displaced from their homes due to growing environmental degradation, and the encroachment of development projects onto their land. They are left without work and homes as they are forced to migrate. “These victims of, what Rob Nixon first termed quite aptly, #SlowViolence, become even more vulnerable when you layer on the increasing unpredictability of weather patterns. I hope in the collecting and telling of stories of these Environmental Refugees, we can eventually -- collectively -- push for mitigating impact on them, right planning, and if it must come to that, just rehabilitation,” reads her poignant description of this second account on instagram.
  • 23.
  • 24. • Adnan Abidi @adnanabidi In a variety of colours and across various landscapes, exist the images taken by Adnan Abidi using just his iPhone. Based in New Delhi, Abidi is a self-taught photojournalist with Reuters and has covered various world events from the 1999 Kandahar hijack of an Indian Airlines flight, to the Kashmir earthquake in 2005, among several others. The features on his Instagram feed give you a behind-the-scenes look into his wanderings as a photojournalist on assignments, as he interacts with various people and cultures.
  • 25.
  • 26. • Anil Sharma @anilsharma07 On Anil Sharma’s page, some of the country’s biggest social and political events are captured with seeming ease. Working as a photojournalist with the Indian Express has given him access to avenues unavailable to the common man and he often presents famous personalities, such as Rahul Gandhi and Sachin Tendulkar, to name a few, in a more humanized and relatable in form; capturing their more spontaneous, intimate, and real moments.
  • 27.
  • 28. • Anushree Fadnavis @anushree_fadnavis • A photojournalist with Indus Images, Mumbai based Anushree Fadnavis is passionate about photography and finds joy in the little things. For her, every image tells a story and in her #traindiaries project she captures the stories of travelers in the women’s compartment of the local trains in Mumbai. • Energetic children with their tired mothers, women selling a variety of products; books, hair clips or snacks, some seeking alms; transgender women wary of getting their pictures taken and groups of women who’ve befriended each other being daily travellers. Her images have a sense of joviality and vitality to them, even a hint of nostalgia as you think back to your school and college commutes.
  • 29.
  • 30. • Chandan Khanna @khannachandan The work of Agence France-Presse (AFP) photojournalist Chandan Khanna captures the best of India and the daily lives of its people, cultures and places. Based in New Delhi, his Instagram feed is a delight to go through as he balances vibrant colours and the mundane; the struggles and frivolity of youth and old age; #dailylife is probably his most popular hashtag. The serene and the dynamic are juxtaposed showcasing various facets of the country. Using an iPhone, he covers subjects ranging from the frantic streets of Delhi to the banks of the river Ganga. He also runs @peopleofdelhi, a series of striking monochromatic portraits of the inhabitants of Delhi.
  • 31.