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The Excellence Behind Kaito

We had the pleasure to sit down with Kaito and discuss his background, his perceptions, and his future. Keep reading to find out what’s more in store for him. 

How long have you been doing photography? 

 

I’ve been doing photography for about six years.


What was the starting point of your career in photography that made you go, “Boom! This is what I want to do.”


I would say probably when my friends and I just used to meet up and walk around the city and go to New York. We would travel and really just have fun shooting and creating street photography. It was just fresh and really free to create. 


Do you remember the first camera that you had?


The first camera was a T2i, I believe. A Canon T2i. 


So what do you shoot on now?


I shoot on various cameras depending on the shoot. I'm not really tied to anything to shoot, but two shoots ago I used the Hasselblad, and the last shoot I used a Canon. So, it depends on what I am in the mood for. 


You’ve worked with so many artists over the time such as Saweetie, you did the Vanity Fair shoot with Diddy, and more. Which artist was the first person you ever shot and who was your favorite? 


The first artist that I collaborated with was Montana of 300 from Chicago. Then it was King Los.  I would say that I don't really have a favorite yet. 

Okay, cool. That’s understandable. Is there any artist that, like, you're looking to work with in the future? Like on the top of your head?


Probably The Weeknd.


That would be really nice. 


Yeah, The Weeknd would be sick.

 

     

    Your work has such nuances of classic black excellence. What is your process and intention for each shoot? 

     

    If it's like my photojournalism work, I like to tell the story of what's kind of going on and just bring bring the person and beautiful light. Whether it's added light or typically I just shoot natural light. And if it's more studio photography, I like to just sit and really think of how this subject should be portrayed and and how do I see them being portrayed for the shoot still in beautiful light. But yeah, I like to do research on the person, really do a deep dive on where the person comes from. And then I just think start thinking creatively about what I see.

     

    Well, in this day and age, there's been like a definite emergence of photography. I think the amount of photographers that really come out and I think have just become so successful has been really nice. But are there any other photographers right now that have inspired you or anyone from the past?

     

    Yeah, my favorite photographer is. A mix between Howard Bingham, Gordon Parks, Annie Leibovitz, I would say photographers of this modern day that inspire me are Sasha Samsonova and Micaiah Carter.

     

    Okay. So you've captured in really different settings, I feel like it really shows throughout your work how you can keep the emotion of each shoot so profound,  Since you’ve worked in concerts or you've done really personal photo shoots. So if you had to pick, especially when it comes to your photojournalism work, is there a particular setting that you feel more comfortable with or you prefer shooting with?

     

    So actually, I just traveled to Vegas and I shot Usher's concert and it was really different for me because, you know, through Covid and through everything, you know, everything kind of scaled down a lot, even photo shoots and, you know, how many people are on set and stuff. And I'm used to just being a one man band through like these last five years. And I would say, like, I love just documenting moments, but I've grown to love studio photography or, you know, outside natural lighting and more locations so I would honestly say that. My favorite would probably be location shoots.

     

    Yeah, I think when you talk about, I think, capturing people in their moment,  that reminds me of one of the pictures you've taken of Tyler and Rocky, I think in a recording studio. But I think that one is just so nice because you can feel just what that element was and probably how fun it was to be in that place with them. So I could definitely agree with that.

     

    So, yeah, just a touch on that, they were laughing the whole time and I selected that to put that, to share that with the world because that actually gave a real description and a real image to describe that studio session. You know, it could have been any other choice of a photo out of the hundreds that I probably took, but that one was just a perfect moment. And I'm always just aware of what's going on around me.So I'm always just ready to just document. I sit in the corner and I just observe and I look for different moments, whether they're intimate or the whole room is laughing. I'm always just trying to document what is going on. I've learned through my journey of telling stories and making sure that people in the future can really know-- if there were no words-- what images, what set of images, what four images could tell a story in. 

     

    If there was a song to describe your work or a film, what would it be? 

     

    Hmmm. That’s such a good question. I’d have to say “My Testimony” by Marvin Sapp.

     

    What is the future for Kaito? Are you interested in doing any long-form, or campaigns? 

     

    I would say my future would be, getting more into the advertising space, working with brands and really shaping how I see their brands looking. So that's one thing I would love to keep creating in the editorial space. I love the creative elements of that. Also I would love to direct a lot of commercials. I would love to keep just exploring photojournalism and maybe traveling somewhere overseas or, you know, something like that and just telling real stories as well. So that's kind of what it is. I'm kind of just in the moment, but I would love to see myself just in those various spaces for sure.

     

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