The art of making something out of nothing! Beautiful captures! Thanks for sharing and have a great day.
@normandcharpentier19182 күн бұрын
Thank you for this amazing video (and sharing beautiful videos scenes of Montreal).
@watching-youtube-now2 күн бұрын
I've watched all of your philosophy related videos and I liked them. I have one critique though, I think you're cutting your words too short in post-production. I understand that you probably take many breaks between sentences or even words, as your english enunciation is probably not that great, but even in the post-production I think you should leave yourself more room between the words. Currently it sounds a bit cramped and a bit rushed. It's more pleasing to listen to speech when it has pauses. Just my two cents, not intending for it to be offensive.
@michEjo-j4l3 күн бұрын
Amends means change for the better
@prince_warhero4 күн бұрын
While this video is good and presented well.i don't think this is anything specific to photography but these philosophies can be applied to life in general
@ANGLofficial5 күн бұрын
My gosh this is one of the best video I saw!
@birodejaneiro5 күн бұрын
Thank you for this
@BrendonBigley5 күн бұрын
i think this is my favorite video of yours so far. great work, man.
@rudranilkundu89947 күн бұрын
❤❤❤
@ShayneScherer8 күн бұрын
When I clickjed this video I was not expecting it to be shot in my city (montreal) haha
@orangebetsy9 күн бұрын
I walked around nyc tonight saying “ichi go Ichi e” it’s my new mindfulness photography mantra 😊 📷
@orangebetsy9 күн бұрын
Ichi go ichi e is a great one for me.
@inbarajanmeenakshisundaram439310 күн бұрын
Yet I believe the most dangerous thing for an artist is to think they have it all figured out. The greatest artists are often the ones most aware of what they don't know, and crossover is no exception. In every interview, he remains kind and humble. There's certainly much to learn from his approach, especially considering he's one of the greatest filmmakers in the world. His attitude teaches us not to assume we understand everything but instead to put in the effort with our entire being to truly grasp the essence of what we are doing. This is the core of his philosophy. ........❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤
@augustodirham85311 күн бұрын
Non Balenciaga, non.
@stuartbaines284313 күн бұрын
Geisha Excellent 👌
@abdoonkun13 күн бұрын
As the video maker said in the previous video we Moroccan we use a lot’s of primary colors, which sweet fujifilm camera
@Vizible2113 күн бұрын
I used to look up to Hayao Miyazaki a lot when i was younger. But the more i watch his interviews and getting to know him more is a whole different story. I don't like how he's almost disrespecting people under him on that first interview. Like he doesn't even care if those people are happy with what they are doing. All he just want is for them to work, work, work for his own sake. Him saying "it's all about you" does not mean he's talking about you. Lol. He was talking about himself that he will do everything to achieve the greatness he dreams even if that meant overworking and being mean to people under you.
@joshuamlawhorn11 сағат бұрын
He’s right though
@paulvillasi6813 күн бұрын
Could you please tell us the name of the song or singer at 0:28?
@oystercillator14 күн бұрын
Really love your videos! Thank you
@abilashkp224314 күн бұрын
Beautiful video brother..loved it
@FG-kz2fu14 күн бұрын
Once in while, you discover a gem. Great video, sayonara.
@sclogse115 күн бұрын
Has Coppola made his Myazaki film with Megalopolis?
@Sharpened_Spoon15 күн бұрын
This is a wonderful reflection, thank you. I recently started thinking of my behaviours differently; I was upset about how I am sometimes (grumpy, hostile, stubborn..) but began to see those things as part of a whole person that I am. I cannot only accept the parts of me that others enjoy, I must accept all the parts and know they, and my response to them, are what ultimately decide my destiny. And so I must also realize, that I must accept all the parts of others if I wish them to change my life too. Because the important part of who we are is not the natural state of being, but the way we actively respond to our way of being. And you can only see this if you accept all parts of the whole. This is to say, I think some of Miyazaki’s statements align with this concept, trying hard only reveals your natural limitations, moving past them is a process of acceptance and response, this is growth. I tell myself in those moments: “I am being part, of a whole human” and while being aware of what my challenges are, I continue working.
@herreramanuel851616 күн бұрын
nice video bro =) keeep doing it
@ras____elijah16 күн бұрын
Beautiful illustrations bro, love the soothing sounds of your background instrumentals captures a person attention. Elegant guidance.❤
@koreanstallion17 күн бұрын
do des kaden
@tomguder19 күн бұрын
Arigato.
@Hassebas8819 күн бұрын
what is that opening track? that rocks!
@miss_editor20 күн бұрын
Love the philosophies, especially impactful hearing them while watching you take photos in my home town and lens it so interestingly. Reminds me to try to see things with new eyes sometimes.
@scenesscout21 күн бұрын
Takes himself and his work way too seriously. His landscapes and worlds are great. His people are just a way into them when they aren’t too cartoonishly distracting. All the European influence in him is pathetic and boring and he never learned to avoid it.
@Micardi1222 күн бұрын
Thank you! This is a precious jewel of video. Bravo!
@simonburrows146723 күн бұрын
This is helpful
@郭禹睿23 күн бұрын
装你妈洋鬼子,腾讯视频都出来了😅
@BigDub2424 күн бұрын
ill recognize montreal anywhere great video!
@NaeemJigsaw25 күн бұрын
Such a beautiful video! Can you please share all the music you used?
@neurojitsu26 күн бұрын
Loved this. I can recommend to anyone interested to read deeper , "The Structure of Detachment - the aesthetic vision of Kuki Shuzo" (with a translation, analysis and essays on "Iki no kozo") by Hiroshi Nara.
@neurojitsu26 күн бұрын
Superb essay with such an important message, and beautifully executed, letting Kurosawa's voice and images speak rather than over-analysing, and giving his ideas the space to breathe and percolate. A reminder to me that less is often more. Thank you, I am going to study more of his ideas.
@realistfilms26 күн бұрын
Beautiful and useful
@from_tomas27 күн бұрын
thank you for putting this together and sharing it with us - it's beautiful and inspiring
12:10 Some of us remember when those results did not come immediately. When we had to take the roll of film to the lab and wait a day or week to see the results of pictures that were taken maybe a month ago. We learned to gauge the results of the photo before we saw the final image. And while it is convenient to have the camera spit out an image and transfer it to our cellphone, we don't have that pathological need to look at the screen every time we press the shutter.
@MoroccanReflections29 күн бұрын
Rabat, Salé and the Bouregrag estuary will tickle your photography senses 👌
@Teslien29 күн бұрын
I become envious while learning from other languages. Putting words, phrases and sounds unique to their structure gives a perspective that shapes a person's creativity. There's so much to unpack from a human's way of life. Photos can reflect how people go about life as an individual in society.
@kindfaceАй бұрын
Wow ! I honestly don't know how this video ended up in my recommended queue. But so glad it did. I used to sketch fervently when I was young (winning competitions along the way) until I got fatigued and gave it up. At college, I felt the creative urge again and instead picked up my first camera ever (a Canon SLR). I've never stopped photographing ever since. Even though I'm now retired, I'm learning from this content creator and so grateful for this video on Miyazaki san, my fav creator. I absolutely love this kind of video that contemplates the philosophical side of photography; they're rare on YT which is overwhelmed with vloggers pimping their camera reviews and half-baked photography knowledge. Liked. Subscribed. Thanks Yukawa san, for your channel. Keep up the good work!