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Digital Camera World
Digital Camera World
Kalum Carter

Find Your Frame: A Street Photography Masterclass by Craig Whitehead review

Find your frame .

Find Your Frame: A Street Photography Masterclass by Craig Whitehead is the essential guide for anyone looking to sharpen their eye on the street.

Street photography has become one of the most widely practised genres of the social-media era. Its appeal is easy to understand as it is one of the few genres where you can step outside with a camera and start taking pictures immediately. However, while photographing the street is simple, doing it well is another matter altogether.

Photographers have been documenting public life since the earliest days of the medium, long before ‘street photography’ became a defined category, and the best work has always come from a deeper sense of looking and an awareness of what you’re responding to, and why.

That awareness is often missing today. The sheer accessibility of the genre has led to a flood of images made quickly and without much intention. For me, a strong street photograph isn’t just a scene encountered at random; it’s the result of learning how to see, anticipate, and bring meaning to moments that might otherwise pass unnoticed.

I’ve always approached ‘how-to’ photography books with caution, because too many present their advice as the only correct way to work. The books I return to most are the ones that give you tools to develop your own way of seeing. Find Your Frame belongs firmly in that category.

Whitehead, alternatively known as @sixstreetunder, may have risen to prominence in the age of Instagram, but his approach is grounded in the longer tradition of street photography. He writes with clarity, experience, and a genuine desire to help photographers understand not just how to shoot, but how to look. For me, Find Your Frame encourages moving beyond chance encounters and creating work with intention; a practical, insightful companion for anyone wanting to strengthen their street photography practice.

Publisher information

Publisher

Frances Lincoln

Publication date

September 28 2023

Language

English

Print length

144 pages

ISBN

9780711283633

Format

Paperback

Dimensions

15.24 x 1.27 x 19.69 cm

Chapter 4: Get Out There, focuses on the importance of getting out on the street and being present. (Image credit: Future / Kalum)

Price and availability

Find Your Frame: A Street Photography Masterclass by Craig Whitehead is available in paperback from all major retailers, priced around $20 / £15; however is often on sale for much lower.

Review

Find Your Frame is structured around chapters that balance theory with practical, technical guidance, and it’s in this blend that the book shines. A few chapters stood out to me in particular.

The opening chapter, Street Your Way, immediately sets the tone. Whitehead encourages readers to define their own approach to street photography, to look beyond the obvious and make the genre their own. It’s a reminder that there isn’t a single ‘correct’ way to work on the street, and that creativity comes from making the practice your own.

In Get Out There, the message is simple but powerful: just go. You can plan, choose locations, and study techniques, but nothing replaces actually being on the street. So much happens when you’re present and ready to respond, and if you’re not there, you’ll miss it. For me, this chapter was a reaffirmation of a truth every street photographer knows but sometimes forgets – presence is everything.

A spread from Find your Frame, showcasing one of many nuggets of inspiration. (Image credit: Future / Kalum)

Whitehead also offers a thoughtful approach to social media, showing how it can be a tool for sharing work without becoming a source of validation. It’s a timely reminder in an era where likes and follower counts often overshadow the work itself.

A particularly effective technical insight is his discussion of frames within frames. Whitehead explains how to “make order out of chaos by boxing your subject in.” In the busy streets, full of crowds, cars, and movement, isolating a subject through doors, windows, or other structures draws the viewer’s eye and clarifies the story in the image. It’s a simple compositional tool, but one that can dramatically improve the way a street scene reads, and Whitehead’s examples make it easy to understand and apply.

Even as an experienced photographer, I found plenty of practical tips and encouragement throughout. The writing is clear and broken into manageable sections, so it never feels overwhelming, particularly for new shooters. What makes the book even stronger is that Whitehead practices what he preaches. His own images consistently illustrate the lessons he sets out, giving readers examples that feel both inspiring and achievable.

Since reading it, I’ve been taking these ideas with me on every street shoot. Even small reminders, such as looking for frames within frames or following the light, have changed the way I approach my own work.

A spread from Find Your Frame, showcasing that the fantastic street photographs from Craig Whitehead. (Image credit: Future / Kalum)

Final thoughts

For me, Find Your Frame succeeds because it does more than teach techniques. It fosters a way of seeing. Whitehead’s guidance is practical, his writing clear, and his images consistently illustrate the lessons he presents. Whether you’re just beginning or have years of street photography experience, the book offers both encouragement and practical insight. It also encourages readers to explore different sections at will. It is not a linear read, but rather a collection of lessons.

It reminded me to slow down, to look more carefully, and to approach the street with intention rather than chance. In short, it’s a book that doesn’t just tell you how to photograph but shows you why it matters, and how to make work that lasts.

The cover of Find Your Frame: A Street Photography Masterclass (Image credit: Future / Kalum)

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