Street Photography Stroll with a 70-300 mm. #Wednesday Walk in Kathmandu

@x-rain · 2025-09-24 10:25 · Wednesday Walk

When I come to a new city or revisit one after a long time, I always go out with a 50mm f/1.8 mounted on my camera - because it's versatile and light. But gradually I note places where a telephoto lens will work perfectly, and when I have a pack of such ideas, I change the 50mm for a 70-300mm. This is what I did in late afternoon on September 22, 2025 - sharing the results.

I started in the late afternoon, had Nepalese dumplings momo with chicken (0.7$ for a portion), and then walked to the Ring Road, where I found a motorbike taxi (1$) to the Durbar area - the palace square, included on the UNESCO World Heritage List.

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180mm

The old town's streets are too narrow even for 50mm, but there are many archways there leading to yards, and that's where 70-300mm can be helpful.

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260mm

A very special intersection - there is an elevated temple there, so I could take a position above the crowd.

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260mm

This is a big traffic jam where people, cars, and motorbikes got mixed together.

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185mm

A shop across the street, like, 30 meters away from me, while I was standing at a temple construction. We saw each other and... this shot appeared.

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250mm

Sneaking portraits is another option but normally people feel bored in the traffic jam, and images taken in such a disaster have the same energy.

At some point, I realized I had taken all I could from this elevated temple at the intersection, and left it.

I am blind to my own fresh images - can't see what is good and what is bad, so I don't know; but I feel (now) this one is good:

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116mm

I was looking at the shop selling colorful fabrics (in the background), when I spotted two joyful guys, passing by. And then one of them suddenly put his hand on the shoulders of his friend, and the latter lit up with a smile. There was no time to change settings, and I had to quickly swing the camera up to catch the moment. That’s why the image isn’t quite sharp, but I believe the blur makes it feel more dynamic and alive.

Returning from street photography to postcard-like imagery that actually may sell on Shutterstock and such:

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155mm

Or is the next version better?

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185mm

I had walked this street many times with a 50mm, and my heart was bleeding each time - "I must come back with the 70-300mm" was my thought.

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155mm

Vertical version. Not sure about these blurry giants - probably, too much...

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70mm

When there is no perspective in front of you, a 70-300mm becomes quite sad in the narrow streets of Kathmandu. But sometimes it can help to catch a detail like one above.

Do you know what this is? Nepalese license plates.

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230mm

No de-saturation - just a dead tree with crows - looking like somewhere in the North in winter or early spring.

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70mm

Ladies at the Durbar Square. Behind - Bhairav, a manifestation of Shiva, the protector of Kathmandu.

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85mm

Signature roofs of durbars of the Kathmandu Valley.

6 pm, it was too dark for the the 70-300 mm f/4-5.6, so I mounted my lovely tiny 50 mil.

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50mm f/2.5

A small stupa in the end of the archway, located in the residential yard.

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50mm f/2.5

A balcony with rich carving.

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50mm f/4

A tiny Hindu temple by a crowded street.

I had such pleasure with the 70-300 that I felt uninspired to shoot with the 50 mil... or maybe just I burned out all creative energy I had for this walk... anyway, I realized that it was time to walk back to the homestay.

The photos were taken with a Nikkor 50mm / a Nikkor 70-300mm on a full-frame DSLR Nikon D750 on September 22, 2025, in Kathmandu, Nepal.

#wednesdaywalk #street #photography #telephoto #travel
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