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During the summer of 2018, we traveled all over the Médoc and the Bordeaux wine region. Here are a few photos taken in Margaux with a Lomo #redscale and my fabulous East German #Praktica IV.
Trip to Japan #6, Day 2 - More pics of Yokohama Chinatown. It's bigger than the Nagasaki Chinatown (https://www.lomography.com/homes/mackiechartres/albums/2501538-2025-06-nagasaki-nikon-f90x-kodak-ultramax-fujifilm-400), and I'd have to go back to explore it properly. And I haven't even been to see the one in Kobe yet!
Trip to Japan #6, Day 3 - We met up with @yokosima at the Tokyo International Forum. It’s a pretty cool spot for taking photos—an oasis of calm amidst the hustle and bustle of Marunouchi and Ginza, featuring sleek architecture, shaded terraces, and nice food trucks.
Every year at this time, shortly after the summer solstice, when the day reaches its longest duration, an ancient ritual ceremony is revived. It is the period when nature is on the verge between the completion of the productive period and the expectation of the next cycle. Fire, a symbol of purification and rebirth, is used to remove negative forces, to purify the old and prepare for the new. The passage over the flames, a custom that survives to this day, symbolizes precisely this transition: the removal of all evil and the entry into a new cycle of life. A cultural memory that crosses the centuries and connects ancient with modern times.
Every year at this time, shortly after the summer solstice, when the day reaches its longest duration, an ancient ritual ceremony is revived. It is the period when nature is on the verge between the completion of the productive period and the expectation of the next cycle. Fire, a symbol of purification and rebirth, is used to remove negative forces, to purify the old and prepare for the new. The passage over the flames, a custom that survives to this day, symbolizes precisely this transition: the removal of all evil and the entry into a new cycle of life. A cultural memory that crosses the centuries and connects ancient with modern times.
Every year at this time, shortly after the summer solstice, when the day reaches its longest duration, an ancient ritual ceremony is revived. It is the period when nature is on the verge between the completion of the productive period and the expectation of the next cycle. Fire, a symbol of purification and rebirth, is used to remove negative forces, to purify the old and prepare for the new. The passage over the flames, a custom that survives to this day, symbolizes precisely this transition: the removal of all evil and the entry into a new cycle of life. A cultural memory that crosses the centuries and connects ancient with modern times.
Every year at this time, shortly after the summer solstice, when the day reaches its longest duration, an ancient ritual ceremony is revived. It is the period when nature is on the verge between the completion of the productive period and the expectation of the next cycle. Fire, a symbol of purification and rebirth, is used to remove negative forces, to purify the old and prepare for the new. The passage over the flames, a custom that survives to this day, symbolizes precisely this transition: the removal of all evil and the entry into a new cycle of life. A cultural memory that crosses the centuries and connects ancient with modern times.
Finally some photos from Ubatuba, but this time the colours are a little bit more true to life, hahah. This little rangefinder is absolutely amazing!!! I just can put in words how much I love Ubatuba and mostly Itamambuca beach.
Finally some photos from Ubatuba, but this time the colours are a little bit more true to life, hahah. This little rangefinder is absolutely amazing!!! I just can put in words how much I love Ubatuba and mostly Itamambuca beach.
Trip to Japan #6, Day 4 - After dropping off our bags at the hotel, we took our first walk in Naha, heading for Kokusai-dori—the main street where all the action is.
Trip to Japan #6, Day 4 - After dropping off our bags at the hotel, we took our first walk in Naha, heading for Kokusai-dori—the main street where all the action is.
Trip to Japan #6, Day 4 - In Naha, like everyone else, we wandered along Kokusai-Dori with its countless cheap shops, bars, restaurants, and ice cream parlors... It’s colorful and showy, but really fun. You can feel the American influence: it looks just as much like a US downtown as it does a typical Japanese shopping street.
Trip to Japan #6, Day 4 - In Naha, like everyone else, we wandered along Kokusai-Dori with its countless cheap shops, bars, restaurants, and ice cream parlors... It’s colorful and showy, but really fun. You can feel the American influence: it looks just as much like a US downtown as it does a typical Japanese shopping street.
Trip to Japan #6, Day 4 - In Naha, like everyone else, we wandered along Kokusai-Dori with its countless cheap shops, bars, restaurants, and ice cream parlors... It’s colorful and showy, but really fun. You can feel the American influence: it looks just as much like a US downtown as it does a typical Japanese shopping street.
Trip to Japan #6, Day 4 - In Naha, like everyone else, we wandered along Kokusai-Dori with its countless cheap shops, bars, restaurants, and ice cream parlors... It’s colorful and showy, but really fun. You can feel the American influence: it looks just as much like a US downtown as it does a typical Japanese shopping street.
Trip to Japan #6, Day 4 - In Naha, like everyone else, we wandered along Kokusai-Dori with its countless cheap shops, bars, restaurants, and ice cream parlors... It’s colorful and showy, but really fun. You can feel the American influence: it looks just as much like a US downtown as it does a typical Japanese shopping street.
Trip to Japan #6, Day 4 - In Naha, like everyone else, we wandered along Kokusai-Dori with its countless cheap shops, bars, restaurants, and ice cream parlors... It’s colorful and showy, but really fun. You can feel the American influence: it looks just as much like a US downtown as it does a typical Japanese shopping street.
Trip to Japan #6, Day 4 - In Naha, like everyone else, we wandered along Kokusai-Dori with its countless cheap shops, bars, restaurants, and ice cream parlors... It’s colorful and showy, but really fun. You can feel the American influence: it looks just as much like a US downtown as it does a typical Japanese shopping street.
Glimpses of the summer. After stops in Dakar and Nice where I met my friend @vicuna I headed to Bayreuth in Germany. There I was filming with the incredible writer Derya Uzun. She just competed in the prestigious Bachmann Wettbewerb with her text and as an Intro we made a film together. You can see it here: https://bachmannpreis.orf.at/stories/3354611/