PhotoWhoa Review: How to Take Compelling Street Photography by Ian Plant

1. Introduction

I chose this masterclass because street photography has always been close to my heart. For me, travel and street photography are inseparable — nothing beats getting lost in an unfamiliar city, camera in hand, and just roaming. From Lima to Varanasi to Amman, I’ve spent countless hours wandering, watching, and waiting for those fleeting stories to unfold. I’ve also long been drawn to street art and how it collides with daily life — the perfect backdrop for the unscripted.

But I’ll admit, working heavily with stock agencies like Getty, I sometimes feel I’ve lost a little of the spark for pure street photography. Street work is about energy, spontaneity, and play — things that can get dulled when you’re focused on keywords and commercial value. That’s why I turned to Ian Plant’s Street Photography Masterclass. Having previously reviewed his Travel & Nature Photography Masterclass for PhotoWhoa — and being impressed by his enthusiasm, laid-back style, and artistic vision — I wanted to see how he applied those same qualities to the streets.

PhotoWhoa Review: How to Take Compelling Street Photography by Ian Plant

2. Overview of the Masterclass

As I mentioned before this isn’t Ian Plant’s first appearance on PhotoWhoa, and while he’s best known for landscapes and wildlife, here he turns his eye to the street. He makes a strong case for why street photography is worth practicing: it’s a great way to sharpen your eye, learn to see differently, and ultimately become a stronger photographer in any genre.

The course runs about 1 hour 38 minutes and covers the fundamentals of street photography: what it is, how to capture compelling candid moments, and how to think more abstractly and artistically about the everyday world around you. Plant defines street photography as “the study of the human condition” — not necessarily about the streets themselves, but about ephemeral moments where subject, mood, composition, and light combine to create art.

He stresses the importance of learning to see in the abstract — shadows, light, framing, and negative space become the raw ingredients for your compositions. A flare of sun between two buildings, the silhouette of a stranger passing by, or the geometry of city architecture: all of these become part of the visual toolkit for street photography.

Interestingly, he also highlights how street photography overlaps with other genres like travel, cityscape, and even abstract architecture. The human element is often what defines it as “street,” but he encourages photographers not to feel bound to sidewalks or plazas — airports, lobbies, indoor spaces can all provide opportunities to capture stories of people and place.

Plant also downplays the importance of gear, pointing out that technical perfection is overrated in street photography. Instead, he introduces the idea of “strategic technical imprecision”: intentionally playing with motion blur, off-focus, or unconventional exposure to create artistic, expressive images. Whether you’re using a DSLR, a mirrorless setup, or even just your phone, he argues, the essential tool is your vision, not your kit.

What is Street Photogrpahy - a PhotoWhoa Masterclass by Ian Plant

3. Instructor’s Teaching Style

Like in his other masterclass, Ian Plant comes across laid-back but deeply thoughtful. He’s not rigid about rules — instead, he encourages experimentation, imperfection, and developing your own creative approach. What I like about his teaching style is that he’s not obsessed with gear talk or technical jargon; he’s more interested in helping you see the world differently.

His examples are clear and often artistic, showing how he applies his philosophies in real-world scenarios. He makes you feel like it’s okay to get things wrong — blur, overexposure, missed focus — as long as the image communicates something. That’s motivating in itself, because it frees you up to try more, take risks, and chase those fleeting moments.

Black and white photography in Airports

4. Video Quality & User Experience

The production quality of the course is solid. The video is sharp, the audio clear, and the editing smooth enough that it doesn’t distract from the teaching. Ian’s examples are well-presented — you can clearly see the photographs he references, and the on-screen visuals help reinforce the points he’s making. The platform itself is easy to navigate, with chapters broken down logically so you can dip back into specific sections if you want to revisit a technique or example.

It’s not flashy or overproduced, which I actually prefer. The focus is entirely on the content and Ian’s insights, which keeps the learning experience straightforward and practical.

Photography courses by PhotoWhoa

5. Content Relevance & Depth

Street photography is notoriously hard to teach, but Ian breaks it down into practical, transferable lessons. He stresses the importance of abstraction — seeing light, shadow, shapes, and textures as building blocks. He also dives into storytelling: capturing emotions, gestures, juxtapositions, and personality in fleeting moments.

One of the biggest debates he tackles is colour vs. black and white. His view is refreshingly simple: if colour adds impact, use it; if monochrome makes it stronger, strip it back. There are no rules, only choices that serve the story.

How to Take Compelling Street Photography - A Masterclass by PhotoWhoa

Techniques & Approaches

Ian balances two main methods. The first is the “Spider in the Web” approach: finding an interesting composition or pocket of light, setting up (even with a tripod), and waiting for the human element to enter the frame. It’s patient, deliberate, and often leads to powerful, layered images.

The second is the “On the Fly” approach: roaming, reacting, and moving quickly to catch fleeting moments. Here instinct matters most — noticing patterns, bold shapes, or a peak gesture before it disappears. This method sharpens your eye for light and composition and builds creative reflexes.

Across both, he emphasises:

  • Look for bold contrasts of light, even harsh midday sun.

  • Use graphic shapes and architectural details as compositional raw material.

  • Experiment with “strategic technical imprecision” — blur, defocus, unusual exposures — to embrace imperfection as art.

  • Incorporate colour intentionally: bold primaries, complementary tones, or expressive personalities that bring life to the frame.

  • Go where the people are — parades, protests, markets, festivals — where energy and unpredictability collide.

Importantly, he also addresses ethics and respect — something too often skipped. Street photography may happen in public, but that doesn’t mean respect goes out the window. Ian stresses treating people with dignity, avoiding invasive behaviour, and always being mindful. Whether you shoot candidly or with permission, be honest, be decent, and keep a low profile. It’s a valuable reminder that the best photos should never come at the cost of someone else’s humanity.

PhotoWhoa Masterclass review by Geraint Rowland

6. Uniqueness & Value

What sets this masterclass apart is Ian’s fusion of artistic philosophy with real-world practicality. Many street photography guides focus only on camera settings or gear; here, the emphasis is on vision, abstraction, and respect — the harder but more rewarding parts of the craft.

Favorite Tip/Trick: Ian’s idea of “strategic technical imprecision” stood out — embracing blur, motion, and imperfect focus as artistic tools rather than mistakes. It flips traditional thinking on its head and encourages experimentation.

Actionable Tips & Assignments: While the course isn’t structured around formal assignments, it’s loaded with exercises you can take straight into the field — from finding a single location and waiting, to hunting shapes, light, and gestures while on the move.

Examples & Illustrations: Ian backs up every idea with visuals — from New York skyscraper shots framed in sun flare, to airport candids full of abstraction. These examples make the concepts stick.

Bonus Value: By emphasising ethics, patience, and creativity over gear obsession, Ian makes the course feel both modern and timeless. It’s less about copying techniques and more about training yourself to see the world differently — which is what makes it stand apart.

Street Photography in colour or black and white? You decide!

7. Final Verdict: Is It Worth It?

Absolutely. If you’re serious about street photography — or if, like me, you need a reminder of its raw energy and creativity — this masterclass is well worth the time. Ian Plant manages to be both practical and inspiring, showing you how to embrace abstraction, think like an artist, and still keep your work grounded in respect for people.

It’s best suited for intermediate photographers who already know their way around a camera but want to sharpen their vision. That said, beginners will also find it accessible thanks to Ian’s laid-back teaching style. Whether you’re traveling the world or just wandering your own neighbourhood, the lessons here will help you see the streets differently — and capture them with more meaning.

Photography Deals To Improve Your Skills by PhotoWhoa

8. Where to Find It

Learn How to Take Compelling Street Photography by Ian Plant today, click on the link below:

👉 How to Take Compelling Street Photography Masterclass – PhotoWhoa

#StreetPhotography #TravelPhotography #DocumentaryPhotography #StreetPhotoTips #PhotoWhoa #PhotographyMasterclass #IanPlant #UrbanPhotography #StreetLife #PhotographyInspiration #ianplant #photographylessons #geraintrowlandphotography

The Flip: An Iconic Shot from Lima, Peru

Every now and then, as a photographer, you capture a frame that sums up a place, a moment, a feeling. For me, this shot of a boy mid-backflip at Playa de Pescadores in Chorrillos, Lima, Peru, is one of those.

Every now and then, as a photographer, you capture a frame that sums up a place, a moment, a feeling. For me, this shot of a boy mid-backflip at Playa de Pescadores in Chorrillos, Lima, Peru, is one of those.

I lived in Peru for several years, and I spent a lot of time around Chorrillos — a fishing district just along the coast from Barranco and Miraflores. It’s a place full of energy and contrasts: colourful boats bobbing in the water, pelicans swooping low, fishermen mending nets, surfers chasing waves, and kids launching themselves into the Pacific without a second thought.

On this day, the light was perfect — hazy golden tones softening the background skyline of Miraflores. With my Canon EOS 5D Mark IV and Sigma 135mm Art lens (ƒ/6.3, 135mm, 1/640, ISO 250), I was able to freeze the boy at the exact moment he arched backward, suspended above the sea like time had stopped. The fisherman watching on adds a grounding human detail — one life spent working the sea, the other enjoying it in pure play.

This image was a runner-up in Sigma UK’s “Shoot Amazing” competition — a small recognition that meant a lot, given that the lens itself was such a crucial part of the shot. The Sigma 135mm f/1.8 Art is a beast: fast, razor-sharp, and with incredible focus accuracy. It’s not just for action though; it’s also become one of my go-to lenses for creating abstract seascapes, where its depth and sharpness let me play with colour and form in subtle ways.

Chorrillos has always been a goldmine for photography. From the lively Playa de Pescadores, where you can eat fresh ceviche and watch the sunset, to La Herradura, Lima’s iconic surf spot, to the dramatic dives at El Salto de Fraile, the district is layered with stories. If you’d like to read more about the area, you can check out my previous Chorrillos blog here.

But this image, for me, captures it best: freedom, energy, youth, and the constant hum of life by the sea in Lima.

👉 More of my Peru work can be found at www.geraintrowland.co.uk and my Flickr Peru gallery. Prints are also available — feel free to reach out for details.

#Chorrillos #LimaPhotography #TravelPhotography #PeruTravel #StreetPhotography #SigmaArtLens #DocumentaryPhotography #OceanLife #TravelPeru #GeraintRowlandPhotography

🌸 Flowers Through My Lens 🌸

There’s something timeless about photographing flowers. Wherever I travel, I always find myself drawn to the colours, textures, and delicate shapes of blooms — from wildflowers on coastal paths to vibrant markets overflowing with petals. Nature always provides inspiration, and flowers often offer the perfect balance between fragility and resilience. Check out some of my favourite flower photographs in the following slideshow:

I’ve always enjoyed experimenting with wide apertures, capturing flowers in an almost dreamlike, painterly way. Using shallow depth of field allows me to isolate a bloom, blur the background, and create something more abstract and artistic than a straightforward documentary shot. It’s these moments — the little details and hidden beauty — that make photographing flowers such a joy.

Click through the following slideshow featuring some of my favourite flower images from my travels:

If you’d like to explore more of my flower photography, I have a dedicated Flickr album here:
👉 Flower Album on Flickr

And of course, many of my flower and nature images are available for purchase — perfect for bringing a little bit of natural beauty into your home or workspace. You can find them on my website:
👉 www.geraintrowland.co.uk

Flowers may seem simple at first glance, but to me they’re an endless source of creativity and inspiration. Whether it’s their colour, form, or the emotions they evoke, flowers remind us to slow down, look closer, and appreciate the beauty right in front of us.

💐 *If you’d like to purchase prints, commission a piece, or discuss collaborations, feel free to get in touch via my website.
👉 You can also license my images directly through my Getty Images portfolio.

#geraintrowlandphotography #flowerphotography #travelphotography #naturephotography #abstractphotography #documentaryphotography #artisticflowers #wideaperture #wanderlustphotos #artprints #artsale #photosale

Blue Plastic Duck in Cardiff Bay: The Beginning of it All

Canon EOS 500D · ƒ/16 · 18mm · 1/200s · ISO 400

This blue plastic duck bobbing about in Cardiff’s Atlantic Wharf might seem like a joke at first glance — and maybe it is. But this was one of my first environmental-style photographs, taken back when I lived in Cardiff Bay in Wales, during the very beginnings of my journey into photography.

That little duck has stuck with me — part humour, part warning. A children’s bath toy adrift in murky water, dwarfed by the shiny new flats and slick urban redevelopment. It’s cute, sure. But also… off. That tension between the playful and the poisoned has run through a lot of my photographic work ever since.

Cardiff Bay: Regeneration, Reflection & Reality

Once a key industrial port shipping Welsh coal across the globe, Cardiff Bay has undergone a massive transformation in recent decades. What was once the bustling, gritty heart of Welsh industry is now lined with apartments, bars, and restaurants.

This image captures a quiet moment amid all that change — a frozen frame of reflection, quite literally. Still water. Silent symbolism. A floating reminder of the things we throw away, and what still lingers in the background while we build new futures.

Wales: Where It All Began

Cardiff, the capital of Wales, was where my photographic journey truly began. Night classes at Ffotogallery, tucked away in Chapter Arts Centre, gave me my first real introduction to photography — to working with intent, composing an image, and telling a story through the frame. It was during those night sessions I began thinking differently about images. About visual narratives. About how something as simple as a duck in water could say something more.

My camera back then? A humble Canon EOS 500D. Basic, but capable. I didn’t need bells and whistles — just curiosity and a few hours to wander the Welsh streets and waterfronts.

Environmental Echoes & Plastic Intrusions

Like my more recent Duck at Sea photo blog, this photo fits into my ongoing theme of plastic in places it shouldn’t be. Brightly coloured intrusions in serene settings. Nature vs. nonsense. I’ve always been drawn to that friction.

Whether it’s a city canal or a remote seascape, we keep leaving bits of ourselves behind — and not the good bits.

More from Cardiff & Wales

If you want more glimpses into my early work or the Welsh landscapes and urban life that shaped my style, you can check out my other photos here:

From gritty street scenes in Grangetown, abstract seascapes in West Wales to moody skies over Penarth, Wales is all over my work.

Final Thought

A toy duck. A beginner DSLR. A cold day in Cardiff.
Sometimes that’s all it takes to kick something off.

👇 Follow, Share & License:

If this floats your duck, you can:

#CardiffBay #WalesPhotography #EnvironmentalArt #PlasticPollution #UrbanReflections #Canon500D #AtlanticWharf #PhotographicJourney #UrbanChange #GeraintRowlandPhotography

Life Imitating Art: A Moment in Iquitos,

Travel photography, when it’s at its best, often blurs the line between documentary and theatre — and sometimes, as if by cosmic mischief, the street itself sets the stage.

This shot was taken in the wild, sweaty chaos of Iquitos, Peru — a fascinating city deep in the Amazon jungle that cannot be reached by car or road. Yep, you heard right: no highways lead here. It’s boats or planes only, baby. A proper isolated Jungle City, bursting with life, madness, and charm.

I spent a week in Iquitos with a mate, soaking it all in — from the famous Belén Market and Belen Village, half floating, half crumbling into the river, to boat trips up the mighty Amazon itself. We even stayed a few days upriver, tucked away in the thick green. A strange and beautiful place — part frontier town, part jungle fever dream. Take a look at my black and white photography blog taken in Belen Village - click here.

But back to the photo. Right in the Centre of Iquitos, amongst the grand old colonial buildings and cracked pavements, I spotted this absolute gem of a moment: a man — drunk? asleep? lost in thought? — sprawled out beneath a Pacific War memorial statue. And above him, in bronze, another weary soul frozen forever in near-identical pose. Life copying art, or art copying life? Either way — street photography magic, click here to view the black and white edit on my Flickr Account.

I shot this on my trusted Canon EOS 5D Mark II with a 50mm f/1.4 lens — settings: ƒ/8.0, 50mm, 1/250 sec, ISO 250 — the perfect travel camera kit for wandering streets, catching moments like this where history and humanity meet in strange symmetry.

Bonus: The Varanasi Street Comedy Shot

For fans of unplanned street theatre, you’ll also enjoy the infamous Varanasi Street Comedy photo — another moment where real life took on an uncanny artistic pose. You can check that image out and a blog on Varanasi by clicking here.

Slideshow: Iquitos & The Amazon

Here's a little slideshow of some more snaps from my Iquitos & Amazon adventures — market life, jungle river scenes, and those little visual stories that make travel worthwhile. Click through the images below and enjoy:

Explore More

Oh, I travel boy!

#Iquitos, #Peru, #StreetPhotography, #DocumentaryPhotography, #TravelPhotographer, #BlackAndWhitePhotography, #AmazonJungle, #Canon5DMarkII, #ArtImitatingLife, #Photojournalism

Tourist Assistance (Or Not): Varanasi Street Photography & The Everyday Comedy of India

India has a way of humbling you, lifting you, and then making you laugh—sometimes all within the same five minutes. This photo, taken in Varanasi on my second trip to India about five years ago, is one of those moments that perfectly captures the everyday poetry and subtle comedy of life on the subcontinent.

A bold sign reading TOURIST ASSISTANCE painted in crisp red letters. A blue metal box in the foreground. And a man stretched across it, fast asleep in the sun. Is he the assistant? Or just a local catching a bit of warmth in the midday haze? No one knows. But in a place like India, you quickly learn to stop asking and start observing. Check out a black and white Lightroom edit of this image on my Flickr account here.

Varanasi Street Photography & The Everyday Comedy of India

The Beauty of Varanasi

Varanasi isn’t just one of the oldest cities in the world—it’s one of the most visually arresting places on Earth. Whether you're watching sunrise rituals at the ghats, the constant flow of pilgrims and sadhus, or everyday locals just getting on with life, there’s always a story unfolding.

This image is part of a wider series of candid street photos I shot across Varanasi. The city is loud, sacred, chaotic, peaceful, surreal—and the more time you spend there, the more it reveals. That’s what makes it a dream for photographers: the drama, the beauty, the realness of it all. Take a look at this previous photography blog I wrote about street photography in Varanasi - click here.

Second Time Around

This was my second trip to India, and it was the first time I really started to slow down and focus on smaller details. Not just the big epic landscapes or ceremonial scenes, but the spaces in-between. The sleepy moments. The humour. The subtle absurdities that make India such a wild and fascinating place to document.

Shot on my Canon EOS 5D Mark IV paired with the EF16–35mm f/2.8L II USM, I used natural light and let the geometry of the signage and colours speak for themselves. Tech details for the camera geeks are as follows:
ƒ/6.3 | 35mm | 1/160 | ISO 250. Take a look at some more amusing and alternative street and travel photography from my time spent in India in the slideshow below:

Explore More of My India Work

I’ve travelled extensively across India—from the ghats of Varanasi to the deserts of Rajasthan and the hills of Himachal—and my camera has been with me every step of the way. If you’d like to see more go to:

👉 View more India photography on my Flickr
👉 Browse and license my India images on Getty Images
👉 My Instagram has plenty of India images - follow me here

Whether you're a fellow photographer, a traveller planning your first trip to India, or just someone who enjoys looking at the world a little differently, I hope this image (and the wider set) makes you smile, pause, and maybe even wonder what "Tourist Assistance" really means.

#IndiaPhotography #Varanasi #StreetPhotography #CandidPhotography #IncredibleIndia #TravelPhotography #VaranasiGhats #DocumentaryPhotography #LifeInIndia #CulturalPhotography

Reflections in Podil: Street Photography from Kyiv, Ukraine

Shot on my trusty Canon EOS 5D Mark IV with the EF 50mm f/1.4 USM lens, this image captures a quiet moment in the heart of Kyiv — Kontraktova Square in the old Podil district. Camera settings: ƒ/2.8, 50mm, 1/160 sec, ISO 640.

I’ve always been drawn to reflections. Puddles after rain are like ready-made canvases on the street — flipping the world, bending perspective, turning the everyday into something strange and dreamlike.

Here, the bright Ferris wheel at the fairground lights up the grey tarmac in greens and blues, its shape only visible in the water’s reflection. A pedestrian walks past, unaware of the small world captured below him. The faded autumn leaves, the cracked road markings, the washed-out glow of street lights — all bring texture and life to the scene.

I shot this during a trip to Kyiv, Ukraine, just before the war changed everything. The funfair was still running in Kontraktova Square, kids laughing, families wandering about, lovers holding hands under the big wheel. Looking back now, it feels like another lifetime — a city on the brink, caught in a quiet moment before the storm.

Street photography often reveals more than what’s obvious. A puddle becomes a window. A fairground wheel becomes a symbol. This image feels like a mix of joy and unease — colour and darkness blending, as Ukraine itself stood unknowingly on the edge of conflict. Check out a black and white Lightroom edit of the same photograph on my Flickr account here.

#kyivstreetphotography #ukrainephotography #reflectionsphotography #canon5dmarkiv #streetphotographer #ferriswheelphoto #puddlegram #travelstreetphotography #urbanreflections #documentaryphotography

Children of the Ocean: A Tabaski Moment on Yoff Beach, Dakar, Senegal

Fifteen Years, One Continent

Fifteen years ago, with a freshly bought digital SLR slung over my shoulder and little idea of what I was doing, I set off on what would become my first major photographic journey.

After some volunteering in Northern Morocco, a group of friends and I hit the road — driving the length of the Country, through the vast silence of the Western Sahara, across the border into Mauritania, and eventually arriving in Bamako, Mali. I ended up staying there for a couple of months, mostly in the capital. I taught at a local school, took a couple of dusty road trips, and pointed my camera at everything and everyone.

In Bamako, I crashed on the couch of two Togolese Brothers. On their advice, I booked a cheap flight to Togo, then carried on overland through Benin and into Ghana.

That trip through West Africa left a mark. It taught me that photography — especially candid, observational, in-the-thick-of-it travel photography — could be more than just making images. It could be a way of seeing, of connecting, of paying attention. You can look at some of my travel images from that West African trip on my Flickr Folder - click here.

Back in Senegal

A decade or so later, I returned to the region — this time spending a couple of months in Senegal and The Gambia. The energy of West Africa was as magnetic as ever. I based myself around Dakar, a city of contrasts: fishing villages and modern malls, Baobab trees and bustling traffic. And then there's Yoff Beach — a wide stretch of golden sand where life happens in public: fishermen mending nets, kids playing football, women in vibrant and beautiful clothing, animals wandering freely, and the surf is pretty good also! Click here to read an earlier view an earlier photography blog I published about Yoff Beach in Dakar.

This is where I captured the photo — a slice of real life during Tabaski.

Washing the Sheep: A Tabaski Tradition on the Senegalese Coast by Geraint Rowland Photography

What Is Tabaski?

Tabaski, also known as Eid al-Adha, is one of the most important religious festivals in the Islamic calendar. In Senegal, it’s more than a celebration — it’s a national event. Families across the country save for months to purchase a ram or sheep for the traditional sacrifice, honouring the story of Abraham’s willingness to sacrifice his son in obedience to God.

In the days leading up to TabaskiDakar transforms. The city becomes a sea of sheep. Literally. They’re everywhere — tethered along roadsides, herded through narrow streets, waiting in courtyards, even dotting the city’s long Atlantic beaches. It’s a surreal and striking sight, a blend of chaos and tradition that reflects how deeply this ritual is woven into Senegalese life.

Tabaski commemorates the Prophet Ibrahim’s willingness to sacrifice his son as an act of obedience to God — and the subsequent mercy shown by the replacement of the child with a ram. In Senegal, the celebration is taken seriously and celebrated communally. Each family, if they can afford it, buys a sheep in the days before the festival. The animal is kept close, often fed and tended to as part of the family, before it is ritually slaughtered and shared — with meat divided among relatives, friends, and those in need.

In 2025, Tabaski will be celebrated on Sunday, June 8th, though, as with many Islamic holidays, this can vary slightly depending on moon sightings. Before the ceremony, the sheep must be prepared — cleaned, blessed, and treated with care.

Children Leading a Sheep to the Sea

This candid image shows a group of young boys leading a sheep into the ocean for a wash. It might look playful — and there’s definitely joy in the scene — but it’s part of a real responsibility. The boys are active participants in the festival, helping their family and community. The sheep resists, digging its hooves into the sand. The kids strain and struggle, laughing as they work together to coax it forward. There’s a sense of ritual, but also spontaneity.

This is what I love about candid, reportage-style travel photography — when real life plays out naturally in front of the lens. No posing. No performance. Just people being themselves, culture unfolding before the lens. The above shot is one of the first I took of the boys before they noticed I was there, untagged and candid it is still my favourite. Upon seeing me I took a few more of the group more posed surrounding the sheep which can be viewed amongst my Tabaski Festival slideshow at the bottom of this blog.

The Shot

Captured with a Canon EOS 5D Mark II and a 50mm f/1.4 lens, the settings were:
ƒ/7.1, 1/1000 sec, ISO 125.

The light was perfect — soft, overcast, flattering - click here to view the image on Flickr. The colours are rich but grounded: the vibrant painted fishing boats in the background, the boys’ shorts and shirts, the black-and-white sheep, the wet sand underfoot. It’s a dynamic frame full of motion and texture. My go-to aperture today of such shots would always be f/6.0 but f/7.1 works great here, the focus of all the boys and the sheep is sharp. Click here to view an alternative Lightroom edit of the image.

A Festival of People

This photo isn’t just about the sheep or even the kids — it’s about community. About cultural moments that involve everyone, no matter their age. It’s about how tradition, religion, and childhood intertwine — sometimes chaotically — in daily life.

These are the scenes I chase as a photographer: unscripted, layered, human. They speak to the wider World — whether through Getty Images sales or platforms like National Geographic and Conde Naste. And they stay with me long after I’ve left the beach.

Yoff Beach, Dakar, Senegal

In places like this, life spills into the open. That’s the beauty of shooting in Dakar — nothing is hidden. And during Tabaski, the city pulses with meaning and memory.

So here’s to the kids, the sheep, and the sea — and to the small struggles that hold entire stories inside them. Click through the following slideshow to view a few more Tabaski Festival images taken down by the Sea on Yoff Beach in Dakar, Senegal:

#Tabaski #EidAlAdha #SenegalPhotography #YoffBeach #WestAfricaTravel #CandidPhotography #CulturalPhotography #TravelReportage #StreetPhotographyAfrica #GeraintRowlandPhotography #Tabaski2025 #EidAlAdha2025 #sheep

Child’s Play & Holy Cows – Street Life in Varanasi

Canon EOS 5D Mark IV | EF50mm f/1.4 USM

India never whispers. It bellows. And nowhere is that more true than the maze-like gullies of Varanasi—one of the oldest living cities on Earth, and a place that punches you square in the senses the second you step foot inside it. Noise, smells, smoke, laughter, devotion, and dung—Varanasi is everything, everywhere, all at once.

I spent a week there five years ago. Long enough to fall under its spell, not long enough to understand it. I wandered the ghats at sunrise, watched the smoke from the cremations curl into the orange sky, drifted along the Ganges in leaky wooden boats chasing different angles of the same sacred scenes. But it was the downtown chaos—the narrow, ancient alleyways—that really got me. That’s where this photo was taken:

Child’s Play & Holy Cows – Street Life in Varanasi by Geraint Rowland Photography

A young boy mid-spin, full of energy and mischief, dances barefoot along the ledge. In front of him, a cow—painted by nature with black and white inkblots—wanders calmly through the mess and magic. In Varanasi, this isn’t strange. This is Tuesday.

Cows are everywhere in India, but in Varanasi they’re more than background—they’re part of the soul. Revered and respected, they move how and where they want. Traffic parts for them. People wait. They own the streets with quiet authority. No leash, no rush, no stress. Just vibes.

This moment—this fleeting blend of childhood and cultural normality—says so much. A woman watches on, unfazed. The scene around her could be centuries old, or shot yesterday. That’s the magic of Varanasi: it’s timeless. Noisy and chaotic, but somehow deeply still underneath it all.

As a street photographer, you chase these moments. And sometimes, if you slow down and let the place breathe, it gives you something honest. Something unrehearsed. A kid playing next to a holy cow in a sunlit alley. Simple. Human. Real. Varanasi, like most of India is fantastic for urban wanderings and street photography, check out an earlier blog I wrote on Indian Street Photography - click here. You can view around one thousand of my India travel images on my Flickr Account - click here. In addition I have thousands of travel images from Varanasi and the rest of India available to license through Getty Images - click here to view. Click here to read a nice article by Explorer Simon Reeve who calls Varanasi one of the most memorable places he has ever visited. Here’s a slideshow with some more of my Cow related images taken in Varanasi, plus a Water Buffalo with a bird on his head because why not?

#varanasi #india #streetphotography #travelphotography #cowsofindia #incredibleindia #childhoodmoments #candidstreet #everydayindia #photojournalism #urbanlife #canonphotography

Duck and Cover: Pollution, Plastics & the British Coastline

A bright yellow bath duck, bobbing along in the murky waters of Southend in the South East of England. It’s the kind of image that makes you double take. Smile. Then squirm. Because that duck shouldn't be there.

This isn’t a staged studio shot. It’s real, captured among the trash washed up or floating in the shallows. And it says everything about the state of our waters — plastic pollution, sewage leaks, environmental neglect. It’s childlike and grim, playful and damning. It’s not just a toy lost at sea. It’s a symbol of the plastic choking our coastlines.

I took this image low level, close to the incoming tide in the late afternoon light. The waves rolled in and out with a rhythmic slap, and the setting sun cast this soft golden haze. But the light can’t mask the shit beneath. This is England’s coast in 2025 — beautiful, broken, full of contrast.

Surfers Against Sewage - pollution along the English coastline!

Camera Details:

Canon EOS 5D Mark II
EF 50mm f/1.4 USM
ƒ/9.0 | 50mm | 1/500 sec | ISO 320
Handheld, natural light, shot low level with my camera almost touching the water.

The State of Southend

Southend-on-Sea, once a Victorian gem and still a favourite day-tripper destination, boasts the longest pleasure pier in the World and a stretch of Essex coastline famed for its traditional beaches and bucket-and-spade charm. But look beyond the chip shops and arcades, and you’ll see the cracks forming — quite literally — in the water.

Raw sewage, dumped by profit-hungry water companies, has turned many beaches on the Southend stretch into no-go zones after heavy rain. Since Brexit, UK waters have lost the extra environmental protections once enforced by EU directives. The result? Loopholes exploited, fines dodged, and coastlines left tainted — both physically and politically. For a look at some more of my images taken in Southend-on-Sea check out my Flickr Album - click here.

Sewage, Scandal & Standing Up

It’s not just plastic — it’s piss, poo, and profit.

UK water companies have come under increasing fire for pumping untreated sewage straight into rivers and seas, under the guise of “storm overflows.” Translation: we can’t be arsed to upgrade infrastructure, so we’ll dump the waste and cross our fingers. Southend isn’t alone — it’s just one name on a long, dirty list. The Environment Agency reports thousands of such ‘events’ — a polite term for raw shit in the sea. But people are fighting back.

Surfers Against Sewage have been on the frontline for years — a grassroots movement turned national force. What started as a small group of surfers protesting filthy waves has become a powerful environmental pressure group campaigning for clean water, plastic-free coastlines, and corporate accountability. They monitor pollution, lobby for legislative change, and educate communities — all while keeping the stoke alive.

Massive respect to them. They’re doing the hard graft — in wetsuits and wellies. Read more about Surfers Against Sewage on their website, buy some merch and if you can afford it, drop them some coin!


Environmental Irony

The image plays with contrasts — something cute and harmless drifting through a seascape that’s far from pristine. It captures the bitter truth of the modern coast: a place once full of life, now too often full of garbage. Toy ducks. Wet wipes. Condoms. Crap. Plastic bottles. All regulars in the filth-streaked theatre of Britain's beaches. More of my ocean and sea images can be viewed on my Flickr Album - click here.

Duck and Cover: Pollution, Plastics & the British Coastline!

Photography That Speaks

This is why I shoot. Not just to capture pretty moments — but to reflect the mess, the madness, and sometimes the madness within the mess. This image doesn’t scream, but it asks questions. And that’s where the power lies. As always, if you want to license or use this image, check my Getty Images collection or drop me a message directly.


#Southend #Essex #UK #coast #plastic #pollution #yellow #duck #ocean #waste #environmental #photography #Canon5DMarkII #SurfersAgainstSewage #Britain #postBrexit #seaside #irony #polluted #beaches #GettyImages