Learn to see the street differently.
Lessons shaped by walking the streets of Kathmandu — composition, mindset, light, and timing. Meant to be practised, not memorised.
How you will learn here
Each lesson focuses on one idea at a time — something you can notice, try, and reflect on during a walk. These are not rules to follow, but ways to pay closer attention to everyday life. Street photography is best learned slowly and through repetition.
Start Here
Street photography isn't about being fast or fearless.
It's about paying attention, slowing down, and learning when not to press the shutter.
Street Foundations
The core elements that shape strong street photography — taught one at a time, meant to be walked with.
The habits and awareness that come before the camera — how to be present on the street.
How to read a scene, find a frame, and make deliberate choices about what you include.
Light decides what stays visible, what disappears, and what feels important.
Photographing people with respect, clarity, and an honest understanding of consent.
Street photography is not only about capturing a subject, It is about capturing space.
Photographing people with respect, clarity, and an honest understanding of consent.
Advanced Perspectives
A four-part masterclass series designed to evolve your visual voice, break predictable artistic loops, and weaponize spatial architecture.
Moving past postcard views. How to spot over-photographed landmarks and find an original, unrepeatable viewpoint.
The absolute art of waiting. How to establish your background frames and let human characters step into your light.
Capturing operational tension. Utilizing raw gestures, clean juxtaposition, and kinetics to elevate a standard snapshot.
One pre-planned walk, one lens choice. Training physical muscle memory using 28mm wide fields, 85mm crops, or fisheye arcs.
Behind
the Work
How I see, wait, and decide. A look at the thinking behind the images — the choices made long before pressing the shutter, and what happens after.
Read How I Work
Many of these lessons are connected to the photowalks that I have done spanning deceds. Reading helps — Getting out and taking photos helps more. Kathmandu Valley is one of the most rewarding places to photograph in the world — ancient courtyards, living festivals, light that changes everything. Go around Bhaktapur, Boudha, Patan, Kirtipur, Khokana, and beyond. And when you're ready to step outside the Valley, there are trails through Manaslu, Mustang, and Langtang — all the way down to the Terai.
This page will grow slowly over time. The goal is not to teach everything — only to share what has been learned on the street, one walk at a time.