L - R : Daido Moriyama, Alex Webb, and Henri Cartier Bresson. All images are copyright of artists or their estates
Preface:
My choice to write on this topic is two fold. One, on a few occasions I have been asked by up and coming photographers if I think there is a “best lens”, but beyond my personal experience with this question, it was brought to my attention by a friend, that as far as photography goes, “What’s the best street photography lens” is of the most googled topics on the internet. At least the photography internet.
And that question “what is the Best Street Photography Lens” has sprung a flood of articles, vlog post, and and message board threads by a myriad of well intentioned “experts” asserting that surely one lens could be the best. Most of these articles are ridiculous click bate dedicated to either getting you to click a sales link for this years new model blah blah blah, or they are some self-important dip shit claiming that they alone posses the knowledge of a “best” in a subjective medium… if you can’t tell by my condescending tone think they are fucking wrong.
Hence, I decided to approach this oh-so-googled topic from a historical context comparing the work of three masters each of whom tended to gravitate toward one of the three most common focal lengths in street photography: the 28mm, 35mm, and 50mm.
Spoiler alert: there is no best, and don’t trust any asshole who tell you there empirically is.
Now without further ado, three focal lengths, three legends, and the advantages of each.