First time street photography

First time trying street photography here in Switzerland, and honestly, the legal side makes it tricky. Swiss law is strict about personal rights: you generally can't publish a recognizable photo of someone without their consent, even in public spaces. It's stricter than in many other countries. But there are ways to still do meaningful street work:

  • Shoot people from behind or in silhouette, like in this shot, where the figure isn't identifiable.
  • Use distance and environment, let the person be a small element in a larger scene rather than the clear subject.
  • Capture crowds or motion blur where no single individual is recognizable.
  • Ask for consent when you want a closer portrait, a quick chat often leads to better shots anyway.
  • Focus on hands, shadows, reflections, and details that tell a human story without showing faces.

The constraint actually pushed me to think more about composition and mood instead of just faces. Curious how others here handle the legal side in Switzerland or similar countries, any tips?

u/Wuffel_ch — 18 days ago
▲ 2 r/photos

Got a Nikon D5100 from my wife <3

Some of my first pictures. Edited with darktable

u/Wuffel_ch — 20 days ago

Mount Pilatus

I just got a camera as a present from my wife. If I look at the pictures here, I have many things to learn.

u/Wuffel_ch — 20 days ago
▲ 1 r/SaaS

On Thursday evening, a small web agency in Bern was wrapping up a client project. The developer pushed the latest changes, the designer uploaded new assets to Dropbox, and the project manager updated tasks in Jira. Then came the usual routine. Sending an update email, sharing links, double checking versions, and reminding the client again where to find everything.

The client replied. Can you resend the latest files? And where do I sign the contract?

So they switched tools again.

That team now uses Mappli.

One platform. They manage clients, track projects on a clean Kanban board, share files, send invoices with Swiss QR codes, and get contracts signed in one place. Every client gets their own portal with access to everything they need. No scattered links. No version confusion. No back and forth across multiple tools.

When they onboard a new team member or client, everything stays organized and consistent.

Built for freelancers. Works just as well for small teams that want less overhead and more focus.

Mappli is live. Try it free for one month.

Start now: https://mappli.ch/en

reddit.com
u/Wuffel_ch — 2 months ago