I did a video showing the step-by-step process which you can watch here:
Alternatively, you can read along.
1. You'll need to use a registered filming agent to obtain a Filming License from KFCB. I used Zindua. You can reach them on info@zindua.com. For a day's photography, KFCB fees were Kshs6,000/- plus agent fees.
2. Write a letter to the OCS of the Police Station with jurisdiction over your filming / photography location. I addressed mine to the Central Police OCS stating what I planned to do, when, along which streets and promised not to interfere with human / vehicular traffic.
3. Once the OCS signs and stamps your letter, go with a copy to the Department of Urban Planning at City Hall Annexe, 4th floor, Muindi Mbingu Street.
4. They will give you a written invoice which you'll take to the City Hall Cash Office next door. The helpful staff there will issue you with a computer-generated invoice.
5. Pay the required fees at a Cooperative Bank or through a Cooperative Bank Agent.
For a day of photography, I paid Kshs3,640/-
6. Return to the City Hall Cash Office for payment verification.
Once verification is done, you're good to go!
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If you're looking for a message about love and relationships, please consider this 4-part series called Love Island. Whether single, dating, married or formerly married, you will find it worth your time.
Episode 1 is about all the hopes, dreams and desires we dive with head first into relationships. They being met or not, is covered in another episode.
We had to wait a whole week to get the second episode - but you won't.
This one covers the dicey topic of submission in marriage in a way that was quite an eye opener for many. It's a mutual submission dance where the husband dies and the wife submits.
Over 50 million Kenyans are waking up to a new President after Dr William Ruto took the oath of office yesterday, becoming the East African Nation’s Fifth President.
Here are my favourite captures from the Inauguration Ceremony.
By the time I got to Kasarani at 5.30am, thousands were already in the Stadium and thousands more were making their way in on foot, boda boda and cars to make sure they arrived before the stadium was at capacity.
I missed the better part of the sunrise but I could already tell this was going to be a new dawn for Kenya.
As 10 years of an Uhuru Kenyatta Presidency come to a close, here - in chronological order - are some of the moments that he’s found himself in my camera’s viewfinder.
The first time was on 27th August 2010 during the Constitution Promulgation Ceremony at Uhuru Park when he was one of four Deputy Prime Ministers. I didn’t get a very good shot of him though.
What I got good shots of were the celebrations around the new constitution being promulgated. Man, this was quite a celebration!
Kenya’s most scenic spaces are to be found north of the Equator. To experience them, we loaded up the Forester, charged our batteries and left for Marsabit on a 4-day photographic trip that ended up being a 7-day adventure.
For many years, The Big North was a forgotten territory. Lack of infrastructure meant only resilient pastoralists and opportunistic bandits called this home. But around 15 years ago, Kibaki’s government decided to prioritise tarmacking of the A2 from Isiolo to Moyale.
The resulting stretch of smooth asphalt has since opened up counties north of Isiolo to adventurers seeking to soak in the beauty of the semi arid lands. Here, landscapes hug the skies where jagged mountains quench themselves by sipping waters from the occasional rain clouds.