

The photo of Caitlin she received from a stranger looks like a Renaissance painting, but she tells us that in that moment, she didn’t quite feel like an art model. “I was genuinely having a really tough day,” she tells us.
“It was my second day in Paris alone, and I was travelling for uni. I have a little baby girl all the way back in Australia, so I was thinking about trying to enjoy myself despite missing her. I was reading to take my mind off waiting to FaceTime her.”
#3 I Took This One Of A Mum And Her Baby At The Trevi Fountain Last Year, It Was Too Precious Not To Capture

Caitlin didn’t expect to start a trend when she shared the photograph on TikTok, but thinks the trend is beautiful. “I think we spend a lot of time trying to curate ‘candid’ moments or moments in general, and it’s a nice idea to capture and share real moments,” she believes.
She sees the beauty of human connection in the trend and believes it’s about much more than just taking pics of strangers in public. “Any nice thing can be twisted into something negative if you try hard enough, but at face value, I genuinely think the trend is fab.”
Caitlin tells us that this experience has led her to pay more attention to her surroundings and look for similar beautiful candid moments. “I’m definitely looking for more opportunities to pay it forward and do the same thing for someone else,” she says.
#4 Still Deciding Whether Or Not To Send This To The Host Of Our Bed & Breakfast

#6 Me And My Friends Watching The Sunrise And This Man Coming Up To Us To Send It To Us

Moments like these are incredible and prove to us that, as one commenter noted, a stranger can look at a person and see art. Some of the photographs people shared here look like they’ve been taken by professional photographers, but they are, in fact, just accidental snaps someone took on their phone on the street.
While snapping a candid photo like this might seem intrusive, it reflects our innate tendency to people-watch. Experts explain that we, as humans, are social creatures and want to connect and understand others.
Observing them is one thing we can do — if we’re too shy or anxious to approach them, we people-watch and get to know them in a non-intrusive way. It also helps us develop empathy, as we often imagine ourselves in that person’s or people’s shoes as we observe them.
#8 A Stranger Took This Picture Of Me At The Aquarium The Other Day And I’ve Cried Real Tears About It

#9 Found The Couple On A Facebook Group And Was Able To Share This Photo With Them

Photographing strangers is similar to people-watching. We get to imagine stories behind two people sitting in a rowboat, creating backgrounds for them as characters and treating the moment like a painting. This is what candid street photography is like. Street photographs look for those uninhibited moments when people don’t know they’re being photographed.
#10 This Girl On Her Pink Bike Zipped By At Perfect Time. She Doesn’t Know It Exists

American photographer Joel Meyerowitz called this “bruising the scene.” A photographer’s job, according to him, was to be like a magician wearing an invisibility cloak if they wanted a candid photograph. When a contact is made, you might get a story, consent, and background on your subject, but there’s something magical in not knowing any of it and letting the moment and its subjects speak for themselves.
#13 I Wish I Knew Who These People Were Every Day I Took It Off My Hotel Balcony

#14 I Cherish This Airdropped Photo Of Me In Morroco Travelling Solo And Super Shy To Ask Anyone For A Photo

In this day and age, many people might not want to be photographed without their consent. In many countries, it’s legal to take pictures of people in public places, like on the street. Others, however, such as France, Brazil, South Korea, Switzerland, and Spain, require that a photographer obtain consent from their subject.
#17 A Girl Air Dropped Me This While I Was Solo Traveling And I’ll Never Forget It

Yet, when we ask the people, a slight majority prefer that strangers not take their pictures. Over 50% of respondents in a 2021 academic survey disagreed that it is okay to photograph people on the street. Many worry that their faces will appear on the internet without their consent, as 60% believed a photographer should obtain consent before publishing the photos.













