Yadi is a New York City portrait subject and friend of Acromatico, photographed in a completely unplanned street session on one of the coldest days of the year, right after the snow had melted. Nothing was pre-arranged: no wardrobe, location, time, or theme. Acromatico is a family-run photography and brand studio working across South Florida and New York City since 2004.
This New York City portrait of Yadi came together on a random Sunday with zero planning. Yadi and the photographer, who are close friends, picked one of the coldest days in the city, right after the snow melted, and simply decided to shoot. Wardrobe, location, time and theme were all unplanned. Yadi drove the pickup, and the photographer grabbed five random things from around the house to work with: a mason jar, a cheese grater, a couple of silver and gold greeting cards, an ipsy bag and a napkin holder.
It was freezing, but Yadi delivered. The two had fun getting creative and playing with light and the odd assortment of props. Hats blew off, random cars slowed down to check that they were okay, and a few hot chocolates got them through it. These spontaneous, themed-yet-unplanned portraits are exactly the kind of work the studio lives for.
“These are the moments I live for and glad we got to have some fun while at it.”
Good to know
New York City spans five boroughs, and its dense streets, brownstone blocks and open avenues make it one of the most varied backdrops in the country for portrait photography. Winter, in particular, reshapes the city: bare trees, low light and the brief window right after a snowmelt give the streets a stripped-down, high-contrast look that suits a dark fine-art aesthetic.
For anyone planning a cold-weather street portrait session in NYC, the practical realities matter as much as the location. Wind funnels hard between tall buildings, temperatures on exposed avenues drop fast, and daylight is short in the winter months. Sessions like Yadi's prove that a memorable portrait does not require a planned location or a rented studio. With a willing subject, available light and a handful of everyday objects, the city itself becomes the set. Acromatico, a family-run studio working across South Florida and New York City since 2004, approaches these shoots with that same improvisational spirit.