“I’m trying to capture life as I see it.”
This Is How I See: Tokyo in Black & White
New York City based street photographer Phil Penman returns to Tokyo year after year. Its energy reminds him of New York, but what draws him in most is the fashion and atmosphere of the city. He is captivated by the people the world seems to pass by and the constant motion unfolding around them. In an age where images can be generated and reality can be simulated, his photography remains a way to hold on to moments that happen once and cannot be repeated.
This story is part of an ongoing Tokyo Street Series. Subscribe to our newsletter to follow the series as new photographers are featured.
Drawn to the Street
Phil began his career in the press. Assignments, agency work, celebrity shoots and years working on fast moving stories taught him to react quickly. Hesitation meant missing the frame.
Street photography became a way to shoot for himself. While he is no longer chasing press assignments, that mindset still shapes the way he works today. When arriving in a new city, his first instinct is to start shooting immediately. If he waits too long, the details that first caught his attention begin to fade as familiarity sets in.
From street portraits to minimal scenes, from gritty edges to quiet details, his approach stays the same, isolating a single moment within the rush of the city.
“I don’t want the viewer to figure out what’s going on. I want them to know exactly what I’m showing.”
Phil Penman
Urban Motion
Tokyo is often seen as a city of colour, but Phil finds it perfect for black and white. The fashion and frantic pace of the streets naturally align with his style of photography. Returning to places like Shinjuku Station, the busiest station in the world, he is drawn to the constant flow of people passing through its corridors each day. For Phil, a still image alone cannot fully capture that feeling.
Often shooting with a slow shutter, he uses motion to make the viewer feel like they are walking with him. Sometimes figures blur past like ghosts. Other times, he pans with one person so they stay sharp while everything around them rushes by in a blur.
“Tokyo has this frantic pace… it doesn’t do it justice as just a still.”
Phil Penman
About Phil
Born in the UK and now based in New York City, Phil Penman is a street photographer whose work is rooted in documentary storytelling.
His relationship with photography began long before it became a profession. At home, his father taught him how to develop and print black-and-white film. The darkroom became a place of fascination: light, contrast, grain, paper and the slow appearance of an image. For him, black and white is not just a visual style. It is a return to the beginning.
The professional path that followed was intense. He started in the press industry as a teenager and built his craft through years of assignment-driven shooting. Later, the pressure of celebrity and agency work pushed him far from the simple joy that first drew him to photography. Street photography became the way back: walking, observing, and shooting for himself again.
That restless mindset remains. Milestones are celebrated, but never treated as an end point. The question is always what comes next, how to grow and how to make the work stronger.
Phil’s Gear
The Right Tool for Each Moment
Phil has never approached street photography in a conventional way. He has never followed the one camera, one lens philosophy. His years in the press taught him to carry multiple cameras with a different lens on each so he is always ready to go, and he still works that same way in his street photography today.
Each scene demands something different. A wider lens for closeness, a longer lens for distance, compression and scale. Working with two cameras allows him to react instantly without stopping to change lenses.
His current setup includes the Leica M EV1 and Leica M11 Monochrom, often paired with the Leica Noctilux-M 50mm f/0.95 ASPH. To him, gear is simply about having the right Leica for each moment.
“The coolest thing is when they say, thank you for noticing me.”
Phil Penman
“This is the one I’ve been waiting years for.”
Phil Penman
The M Experience: Reimagined with the EV1
Phil has been shooting with rangefinder cameras for more than 20 years, and the Leica M EV1 has opened up new possibilities for him. With lenses that demand precision, such as the Leica Noctilux-M 50mm f/0.95 ASPH., the EV1 removes obstacles. His images can be previewed in black and white, focus can be confirmed with confidence and fast moving street scenes can be captured without needing additional accessories.
Wider lenses become more practical. Seeing the full frame is easier than with a traditional rangefinder, while magnification allows focus to be checked precisely, right down to the eye. Phil is able to move between the EV1 and Leica M11 Monochrom seamlessly, making the EV1 a natural extension of the system.
Modern tools are not about replacing instinct. Faster focus, framing and response allow the photographer to stay closer to the moment, while embedded copyright credentials help protect authorship as images are shared and reposted online.
M-Cameras: The Tools for Street Photography
The Leica M has long been regarded as the quintessential street-photography camera. More than just a device for capturing images, it is an instrument designed for truly seeing. Its minimalist design, manual controls and compact form factor make shooting intuitive and unobtrusive, allowing photographers to engage naturally with their surroundings. Over decades, M-Cameras have become synonymous with street photography, offering a connection to the moment that few other cameras can match.
Phil Penman joins How I See: The Leica Podcast