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Continuing with our quest to showcase some of the most intriguing cameras ever made, today's installment looks back at an unusually designed snapper made by Canon in the early 1990s.
I’m having a hard time deciding whether it is a good thing or a bad thing that one doesn’t know one is experiencing something for the very last time whilst one does.
“Through my more recent work, I’ve been increasingly drawn to portraiture, so, in preparation for a personal project I’ve been working on, it felt right to start shooting some of my lovely, talented friends. In the past, I would have usually only had my camera if I was intentionally heading out for a photo walk or trip away, so this year, I set about ensuring that I always carried it with me.
Having left behind Brighton, the city I called home on and off for the past 14 years, it’s a bittersweet, visual tribute. The series speaks to the idea that the essence of a location is intricately tied to the people who live there, and through those I have met, it has defined my connection to a place. The project was my way of documenting those moments and encapsulating those shared experiences that have defined my time there.”