They Already See
the World Differently.
An 8-week after-school program where kids ages 7–14 learn to compose real photographs — rain puddles, cracked sidewalks, their grandmother's hands — before they ever touch a filter.
Recommended by 40+ Brooklyn art teachers · Trusted by 280 families since 2019
A portfolio that builds itself, one week at a time.
Each session builds on the last. By Week 8, every student leaves with printed work they made — not downloaded, not filtered, not someone else's idea of beautiful.

Observation & Composition
Learning to Look
Before touching a camera, kids spend an entire session just looking. They trace the edges of shadows, find the hidden geometry in a fire escape, and learn why a dog sleeping in a patch of sunlight is already a photograph.
Your child will come home seeing doorways, fences, and kitchen tables differently.
Natural Light & Shadow
The Language of Light
Golden hour, overcast diffusion, the way a window turns a face into a painting. Students shoot the same subject at three different times of day and see — firsthand — how light changes everything without moving an inch.
After this week, your kid will start narrating sunsets to you. You have been warned.

Composition Rules
The Rule and the Break
Rule of thirds, leading lines, the frame within a frame. Then we break every rule on purpose. Students discover that knowing the rule is what makes breaking it powerful — a lesson that lands well beyond photography.
Kids who finish Week 3 stop centering every shot. That instinct lasts a lifetime.

Documentary & Narrative
Telling a True Story
Students choose one small subject — a corner of their block, their backpack, their pet — and create a three-photo story. Beginning, middle, end. No filters. No staging. Just honest looking at something real.
This is the week most parents say they first saw their child as an artist.

Portraiture & Connection
Portraits That Listen
The hardest photograph to take is a person who knows you're there. Students practice the patience of waiting for a real moment — a laugh, a thought, a glance away — instead of asking someone to smile.
Many students photograph a grandparent this week. Those prints become heirlooms.

Shutter Speed & Intention
Motion & Stillness
Intentional blur is not a mistake — it's a decision. Students learn to freeze a drop of water and smear a spinning umbrella into silk. The camera becomes an instrument, not just a recorder.
This is the week the camera stops feeling like a phone and starts feeling like a tool.
Lightroom Basics & Restraint
Editing with Intention
We teach editing as a darkroom decision, not a filter swipe. Exposure, contrast, crop — only the tools that serve the original seeing. Students learn the discipline of stopping before they've overdone it.
After this week, your child will wince at over-filtered Instagram posts. Gently.
Curation & Exhibition
The Gallery Show
Each student selects their three best photographs, writes a one-sentence artist statement, and prints them at 8×10. The gallery opens on a Friday evening. Parents, grandparents, neighbors. Real prints. Real walls. Real pride.
Bring tissues. Seriously.
Real photographs. Real kids.
Every image in this gallery was made by a Shutter student during their 8-week session. No adult intervention. No filters.

Ladybug, Prospect Park
Age 8

Maya Laughing, Week 5
Age 11

Abuela's Hands
Age 12

Umbrella, Rainy Tuesday
Age 9
Puddle Mirror, Carroll St.
Age 10
The Camera Itself
Age 13
Give them a semester they'll remember.
8 weeks. 12 students. One printed gallery show. Seats fill fast — Spring 2026 has 4 spots remaining.
"My daughter spent the whole semester photographing our fire escape at different hours. I didn't understand it until the gallery show — then I cried. She sees things I've walked past for ten years."
Denise Okafor
Parent of a 10-year-old, Bed-Stuy
"I recommend Shutter to every family who asks me about enrichment that isn't more screen time. The patience it teaches — waiting for the right light, the right moment — transfers to everything."
Mr. Tomás Varela
Art Teacher, PS 321
"I gave my granddaughter a semester because she kept stealing my phone to photograph the dog. She came back with a printed portrait of me I didn't know she'd taken. I've never looked that good in my life."
Ruth Nakamura
Grandmother, Park Slope
What's included
Duration
8 Weeks
Sessions
Tues & Thurs, 3:30–5pm
Ages
7–14 years old
Class Size
Max 12 students
Location
Carroll Gardens, Brooklyn
Tuition
$380 / semester
Every student receives
Reserve a spot
Spring 2026 starts March 10th. 4 spots remaining. No payment required to hold your place.






