There is a version of every place that only appears after the plan has loosened. The useful thing about a camera is not that it makes the moment important. It asks us to look long enough to notice what was already there.
For this journal, photography is a way to stay close to a subject without pretending to own its meaning. A picture carries weather, hesitation, posture, and all the things a quick explanation tends to leave behind.
Let the first frame be an introduction, not a conclusion.
Most good visual work begins before the shutter. It starts with a slower arrival, a clear reason for being there, and the willingness to make a few imperfect pictures before the day resolves into something more useful.

Editing is where the pace changes again. A sequence needs contrast, breath, and a reason for one image to sit beside the next. The best final choices do not explain everything. They make another look feel worthwhile.
Leave a little space around the image.
A photograph does not need to carry a whole argument on its own. It can keep a question open, make a place feel stranger or more familiar, and allow the reader to bring their own memory to the frame.


