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He struggled to figure out what he could say to put people at ease but realized it wasn't so much about what he said as his overall energy in approaching them. Now, he said, he's calmer in his approach, usually simply looking people in the eye and asking if they mind him taking a photo. "I've gone from pretty much getting turned down by eight out of 10 people to very rarely getting turned down," he said. Over time, the nature of the project also has changed, Stanton said. He started out trying to shoot as many images as he could, trying to get to 10,000 images quickly. Then, as he started posting his images to his website, he began adding written bits about the interactions he'd had with the people in the pictures. People seemed to like reading his snippets, so he began expanding them. Now, he spends more time with some of the people he photographs, getting into conversations that he then spends several hours writing up and posting to his site. "People seem to really be responding to deeper stories of these people and the interactions I'm having," he said. It will take some time before Stanton reaches the 10,000-photo mark, but he doesn't see that as the finish line. "That's one thing that's really evolved," he said. "I don't see an end to it." ___ Online: Humans of New York:
http://www.humansofnewyork.com/
[Associated
Press;
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