Author name: Dante Sisofo

Slow Shutter Speed Street Photography in Tokyo (Ricoh GR III Tutorial + Behind the Scenes)

Slow Shutter Speed Street Photography: Creating a New World at 1/3 of a Second

The Accident That Changed Everything

Foreign. What’s poppin, people? It’s Dante. Before I started my day in Tokyo, sitting in my hotel room with the iPad in front of me, I wanted to break down a small accident that led to a full creative breakthrough. It started outside of Shibuya Station. I was shooting like I normally do — Ricoh GR III, AV mode, f/8, practicing layering, observing the rhythm of people entering and exiting the station.

I made a frame at 1/15 of a second. Completely unintentional. A “mistake.” But the silhouettes looked different. A little blurred. A little ghostly. Something inside me paused. Something new had revealed itself.

That tiny spark led me down a completely new path.


Realization Through the LCD Screen

What really grabbed my attention was how the blur of the silhouettes appeared on my LCD. It wasn’t something I planned. It wasn’t something I was trying to force. It came to me because I was shooting freely, making hundreds of frames, waiting for that girl in the background to lift her head from her phone.

And then I saw it — motion blur in a way I hadn’t intentionally explored.

Tokyo’s crowds move quickly. People are either locked into their phones or sprinting toward the next train. But the camera saw something I didn’t. The subtle blur of bodies. The stillness of a girl glued to her screen. The contrast between motion and rest.

And that’s when it clicked.


Shifting Into Manual Mode

After seeing the effect at 1/15, I decided to intentionally push the shutter lower.
I switched into manual mode — something I almost never do.

1/4 of a second.
f/16.
+1 exposure compensation.
Auto ISO.
Snap focus at 3.5 meters.

I walked to Shinjuku Station the next night with a clear purpose:
Execute the shot.

The stabilizers in the Ricoh GR III actually helped me hold the camera steady enough to freeze the background while allowing the motion of passing strangers to streak across the frame.

I planted my feet.
Held the camera at my waist.
Waited for the overlap of figures.
And let the city move.


Behind the Scenes in Shinjuku

The scene itself was nothing extraordinary — just people hanging out against a white wall near the station, lights glowing from the bars and clubs, promoters standing around waiting for customers. But something about the rhythm of the moment felt right.

Filming behind-the-scenes, I talked through the settings:

  • Manual mode
  • 1/4 shutter, later 1/3
  • f/16 for maximum depth
  • Auto ISO
  • +1 EV
  • Snap focus for clean stationary subjects
  • Let the moving bodies blur naturally

The goal wasn’t complexity.
The goal was intentional experimentation.

And suddenly… something remarkable happened.


The Shot That Emerged

What appeared on the LCD felt like another world.

In the center of the frame, the woman drifting through the scene looked like a ghost, a hologram, a figure emerging through a veil. She looked like she was spawning into existence — something between this world and another.

The still subjects against the wall were crisp.
The blurred bodies crossing the frame created streaks.
The neon skyline added atmosphere.
The entire scene moved toward abstraction.

It looked like Tokyo nightlife distilled into one ethereal moment.

And it came from lowering the shutter to 1/3 of a second.


Breaking Through Creatively

This entire breakthrough came from one thing:

A mistake.

A tiny observation in AV mode.

A curiosity to push further.

And what I realized is simple:
If you never experiment, you never evolve.

Most photographs we make are a result of:

  • where we stand
  • how we time the shutter
  • what settings we choose
  • how reality decides to behave around us

But when you start tinkering with settings you normally ignore, a completely different world can manifest.

With black and white, I’m already abstracting reality.
With slow shutter, I’m discovering something beyond the veil.
It feels like creating a new world from a mundane moment — turning a train station crowd into something transcendental.


Creating a New World From Nothing

The beauty of this technique is that it elevates the ordinary.
People rushing to catch trains.
A girl staring at her phone.
A white wall.
A cluster of club promoters.

Nothing special.

And yet, at 1/3 of a second, something extraordinary emerges.
Something unpredictable.
Something outside my control.

The camera becomes a vessel.
Reality transforms.
A new world materializes.

My goal is to create something from nothing — to take the ordinary and elevate it to a mythic, almost spiritual height. To make a snapshot that feels like a dream.

And I feel like this was the beginning of a real shift in my photography.


Final Thoughts

So that’s the story.
A mistake.
A moment.
A breakthrough.

Shooting in Tokyo at night pushed me out of my comfort zone. I’m normally a daytime photographer — I like waking up early, editing early, going to sleep early. But this trip is reminding me to stay open, stay curious, and push myself into new territory.

Slow shutter speed street photography is now part of my toolkit.
Not as a gimmick —
but as a new way of seeing.

If you want to see the behind-the-scenes video, camera settings, and full breakdown, check out the blog on:

HOME PORTFOLIO

Peace.

I HAVE TO KEEP SHOOTING BECAUSE I NEED TO SEE HOW FAR I CAN PUSH MYSELF

Most photographers just like the idea of being a photographer – for example wearing the camera on the neck, playing with different gear, dwelling on the outcome of making a book a show etc

Great work comes from pushing through lack of inspiration

In order to become the best photographer you can be you have to make a lot of mistakes and shit work

Volume over quality

Produce with maximum speed output and volume

I show all of my shit work in a stream of becoming on my website for free viewing to showcase what it takes to become the greatest photographer you can be

I’m a living blueprint

Going Limitless: Evolve Beyond Street Photography and Unlock Creative Freedom

Going Limitless With Your Photography

A Walk Through Yoyogi Park

What’s poppin’, people? It’s Dante. I’m currently going for a nice stroll through Yoyogi Park in the middle of the day here. It’s around lunchtime — noon, 11:30am, something like this. And today’s thought is about going limitless with your photography.

This notion came to me as I’m photographing the leaves, the trees, the bark, and all these different natural things. Over the past decade I’ve primarily focused on photographing people — humanity — mainly close-up candid street photos. But the power of going limitless is all about photographing what genuinely piques your interest. What is your true curiosity pulling you toward?

Remove the external noise. Remove what people expect from you. Remove what history has already done. Follow your inner, childlike curiosity. That’s where bliss is found.


The Sacred Process

For me, the process is everything. It’s sacred. It’s where all the meaning lives. When I step away from the Shibuya scramble and come into a space like this park, I find clarity. Peace. Stillness. It reminds me of being a boy exploring the Wissahickon Forest in my backyard in Philadelphia — sharpening spears, climbing trees into the canopy, building teepees and wandering like a little Native American, finding caves, disappearing into the unknown.

There is something godlike about returning to that state. Jesus said to “return to the child” to enter the kingdom of heaven — innocence, naivety, curiosity, wonder. To be childlike is to be godlike. It frees you from society’s weight.


Limitless Potential

A child is limitless. Infinite potential. Everything is new, fresh, novel. And as an artist, I never want to feel like I’ve mastered everything or photographed everything. I want the endless possibility of expanding my horizons — forever. That’s the essence of going limitless.

Photographing what resonates with my soul naturally becomes a reflection of my inner state. That’s the purest expression an artist can make. When you detach from outcomes and let your gut lead, you make your most authentic work.


Breaking the Box

If you’re a street photographer, maybe the next step is to stop thinking of yourself as a street photographer. That genre-box can slowly suffocate your growth. Limitations can be useful until they become stagnation.

Going limitless opens infinite possibility. Photograph everything. I want to photograph the whole world. And while that may not be possible in a lifetime, the attempt is where the magic lives.

Look at the way light peeks through trees. Look at the macro patterns of bark and leaves. In black-and-white, it becomes abstraction — something beyond the veil. Nature becomes a canvas for exploration.


Metamorphosis

To evolve, change, and transform — that is joy. That is bliss. Think of the butterfly: the caterpillar turns to goo, disappears into a cocoon, and emerges something new, delicate, and free. That’s the artist’s path.

Nietzsche wrote about this metamorphosis in Thus Spoke Zarathustra: the camel (burdened by society), the lion (creating one’s own path), and finally the child — the most liberated form. Infinite potential. Pure creativity. The child is the purest artist.


New Ways to Explore Photography

I love exploring macro photography. I love making pictures of pictures — a copy of a copy. I love dragging elements into Procreate and making collages. Photography doesn’t have to be confined to the rectangle. You can become a philosopher with a camera, a multimedia artist, a podcaster, a filmmaker. Expand.

Photography is still young. A couple hundred years old. It’s nothing compared to the thousands of years of painting. There is still novelty to be found — infinite approaches that haven’t been done yet.


Creating > Consuming

Delete your Instagram. Stop consuming. Start creating.

If you feel the urge to consume — read a book. Write. Make a video. Make a collage. Make a picture. Make something. Stream your thoughts. Stream your life. My blog on http://dantesisofo.com is my home base — an OG Tumblr-style stream of consciousness where everything I make just flows.

Each morning I make collages using my own photos. I extract faces with the built-in tools on the iPad, drag them into Procreate, and remix them. It’s fun. It’s freeing. It’s limitless.


Experimenting With the Ricoh GR3 + GR3X

Using the crop mode on the GR3X at 71mm has let me make tight snapshots of people’s faces as they enter the light at Shibuya Crossing. They look like Japanese woodblock prints — etched with light and shadow instead of ink.

I’ve been experimenting with slow shutter at night too. I made an accidental image, then spent the next two days intentionally chasing that effect — pushing myself, tinkering, failing, learning, evolving. That playfulness is the child-state. That’s the breakthrough.

One photo I made recently — the Tokyo Ghoul image — a lady floating in the middle of the frame with the skyline behind her. Pure accident turned into pure intention.


Endless Exploration

So yeah — going limitless is about opening yourself to endless exploration. Endless transformation. Endless discovery. Your work becomes a reflection of your soul, your curiosity, your movement toward the unknown.

I’m heading out of Yoyogi Park now, going back toward Harajuku, then Shibuya. The chaos awaits. But the peace of this place — the ginkgo trees, their stinky little fruits that smell like cheese puffs — it reminds me why I do this. Why I explore. Why I go limitless.

Thanks for watching. See you in the next one.

The Ricoh GR III + GR IIIx Street Photography Combo Nobody Talks About

Dual-Wielding Ricohs in Shinjuku

What’s poppin’, people? It’s Dante — currently walking around Shinjuku, Tokyo, Japan, thinking about why the Ricoh GR III and Ricoh GR IIIx is the killer combo for street photography. Dual-wielding both Ricohs has been wild on this trip. It’s day five, and I’m finally pushing the cameras in a direction that feels fresh and experimental.

The Power of the 71mm Crop

With the Ricoh GR3x, I’ve got the crop button set up so I can instantly jump into the 71mm crop mode. On the Ricoh GR3, I mapped the crop button to the video button on the side. As I walk, I’m fishing for moments, locking onto faces, micro-expressions, gestures — the salaryman energy, the couples, the intensity of Tokyo’s crowds.

The compression of the 71mm crop on such a tiny camera is insane. It isolates faces in a way I’ve never done before.

Switching Between Tight and Wide

Then I swap instantly to the GR3 for the wider scenes — 28mm or 40mm — where layering comes alive. Foreground, middle ground, background. Total chaos. Total storytelling.

Having the ability to go super tight and then immediately go wide keeps me curious, engaged, and in flow.

Embracing Grain and Imperfection

Because I shoot small JPEGs, high-contrast black-and-white, max grain and grit, I don’t care about “image quality.” I care about feel. Texture. Imperfection. Mistakes that turn into breakthroughs.

Even shooting at night in AV mode — the slow shutter motion blur started as an accident. Now I’m using it intentionally.

Mistakes → experimentation → discovery → evolution.

Staying in Flow With a Minimal Setup

The beauty of Ricoh is the portability. Camera off → pocket → boom → swap → keep walking. You wouldn’t even know I have two cameras on me right now.

When I’m home in Philly shooting daily, I don’t dual-wield. One camera is enough. But for travel, especially in dense cities like Tokyo, dual-wielding gives me variety and novelty.

What Each Camera Does Best

GR3x excels at:

  • Close-ups
  • Faces
  • Details
  • Architecture
  • Isolated compositions

GR3 excels at:

  • Layers
  • Chaos
  • Wide storytelling
  • Foreground/middle/background depth

Both together feel unstoppable.

Following Light, People, and Chaos

I’ve been following the people, following the light, following the action. Shinjuku Station is fish-in-a-barrel — endless waves of movement and energy. Perfect place to experiment and push into the unknown.

And the LCD shooting style is perfect for loose, spontaneous photography. No viewfinder rigidity. No overthinking. You shoot like you’re sketching. The surprises reveal themselves later.

Walk more → see more → photograph more → become more curious.

The Philosophy of Mistakes

The more you shoot loosely, the more mistakes you make — and the more beauty reveals itself inside those mistakes. Some of the best frames appear only later when reviewing the shots.

That’s the joy of the Ricoh GR system: spontaneity, surprise, and the embrace of the unexpected.

Becoming Through Change

Today’s lesson for myself: change, evolve, transform. That’s where the joy is. That’s where the becoming happens.

This whole dual-wielding approach — the crop mode, isolating faces, mixing focal lengths — came from a single accident yesterday. Now I’m shaping that mistake into a new process.

Ricoh GR3 and GR3x — absolute joy to dual-wield in Tokyo. Perfect for chaos, perfect for flow state, perfect for raw street photography.

The Ricoh Jihadist goes Tokyo, baby.

How to Make a Street Photography Collage in Procreate for iPad Pro

Super simple-

The cool thing about shooting high contrast black and white with my workflow is that you can use random parts of your black and white snapshots for remixed pieces like collages.

  • Step 1: Download Procreate
  • Step 2: Open Procreate and Photos app in Split View (just click the three little dots on the top of your ipad screen)
  • Step 3: Hold your finger on images and drag over pieces of them to procreate
  • Step 4: Layer things together, apply effects, gradients, etc and just fuck around with it (I personally have been enjoying adding noise and the gradient filter lately)

Tokyo Street Photography: Order, Chaos, Instinct, and Vitality

Street Photography in Tokyo: Instinct, Vitality, and the Eternal Walk

What’s poppin’, people? It’s Dante.
Currently walking around Shinjuku, Tokyo, Japan — check it out, we got some salarymen (still one of the funniest words ever, like “white-collar worker” but said with anime energy). Anyway, here are some candid thoughts about Tokyo, the people, and how I’m approaching street photography out here.


The Shock of Tokyo: Order, Kindness, and Culture

Honestly, I’m blown away by the people here. This is what it looks like when a culture sustains itself across generations, across centuries. Orderliness. Cleanliness. Respect. Kindness. Everything is intentional.

You walk into any random café, and they hand you a hot towel to clean your hands.
Every toilet is a futuristic heated bidet spaceship.
On escalators, everyone stands on the left.
In the stations, you hear these beautiful artificial bird sounds while people line up in perfectly straight queues.

Even the speaker voice in the stations sounds joyful and uplifting.
Meanwhile, in Philly? It’s like:

“Attention… muffled static hell… City Hall…”
You can’t even hear what they’re saying, and the lighting makes you feel like a rat in an abandoned mall.

On Tokyo trains everybody is silent, respectful, no loud phone calls, no one munching Doritos. It’s orderly. And honestly? I appreciate it deeply.


Tokyo Is Street Photography Paradise

This city is freaking paradise for street photography.
I’m on day five, and I’m finally settling into my rhythm. I spent the first few days exploring:

  • Shinjuku
  • Shibuya
  • Harajuku
  • Ginza
  • Ikebukuro

But really, the holy trinity is Shinjuku → Harajuku → Shibuya.

I stay in Shin-Okubo, so each morning I walk down through Kabukichō, into the Shinjuku station area, and today — and the rest of the trip — I’m walking all the way to Shibuya.

And here’s the key:

Even in a new place full of novelty, routine and repetition give you power.

By sticking to the same route every day, I increase my chances of catching something special. You build familiarity. You learn the light. You learn the flow. You start seeing deeper.


My Daily Flow

  • Wake up
  • Walk the same route
  • Shoot in Shinjuku → Harajuku → Shibuya
  • Feast at the same all-you-can-eat yakiniku spot near Shibuya Crossing
  • Shoot night Shibuya
  • Subway home
  • Review photos
  • Sleep
  • Repeat

This is my rhythm now. No more hopping trains all day. I thrive in consistency, discipline, and repetition.


Physicality Is Part of the Art

Street photography is embodied reality.
It’s physical. You’re walking, reacting, instinctively responding to life.

That’s why I fast:
No breakfast.
No lunch.
Coffee in the morning. Water all day.
Then a massive charcoal-grilled feast at the end.

I genuinely believe:

Strong art comes from strong vitality. Weak art comes from weak vitality.

This is Nietzsche’s notion of Rausch — the ecstatic creative frenzy where your internal power overflows into the art.

You need that abundance of physical power for strong work.
Photography is a physiological practice just as much as it is an artistic one.


The Zen of Snap Shooting

My setup is simple:

  • Ricoh GR III
  • High-contrast B&W
  • Highlight-weighted metering
  • Auto ISO
  • f/8
  • Snap focus at 2m
  • Wrist strap, point, shoot, don’t think

A man without instinct is a slave to the world.
I don’t want to be guided by maps, expectations, or external validation.
I want to be guided by gut, instinct, intuition.

My only goal: obey the instinct.
Not a slave to society.
A slave only to my gut.


Zooming Out: The Sublime Infrastructure of Tokyo

Shinjuku Station in the morning is sublime — the crowds, the flow, the pace.
When you zoom out, it feels like watching a living organism.

All this order. All this structure.
Millions of people moving in harmony.
The Earth itself rotating on its axis at the exact angle to make life possible.

Street photography is my way of witnessing this miracle.


Why I Love Photography

Photography removed fear from my life.

It pushed me into the world.
It made me curious.
It gave me a mission.
It strengthened me physically, creatively, spiritually.

It lets me live with:

  • Thumos
  • Vitality
  • Courage
  • Curiosity
  • Flow

To me, photography is not about making “art.”
It’s about cultivating a lifestyle, a philosophy, a daily confrontation with the world.

It’s how I conquer myself.


Order and Chaos: The Balance of a Street Photographer

There’s the Apollonian (order, discipline, structure).
And the Dionysian (ecstasy, instinct, chaos).

Street photography thrives where these two forces meet.

Be disciplined in your routine.
But be a pigeon in your mind — free, light, unburdened, soaring.

The world is infinite.
You won’t see everything.
You won’t photograph everything.
But you can keep marching toward the horizon.


Final Thoughts

I’m going to keep doing these morning audio logs each day before I enter the flow. Tokyo is incredible. The people inspire me. The culture inspires me. The streets are alive.

Routine. Instinct. Vitality. Flow.

That’s the mode.

Cheers.

Your art is a direct reflection of your physical power and vitality

Weak artists make weak art because they create from a state of lacking power. Strong artists make strong art because they create from an overflow of abundance and pure physiological power.

Rausch!

Just look at their physiognomy / physical body and you can directly look into their soul and ability for creative output

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