The Silence Between Frames

There’s a rhythm to the street that you can’t force — it moves on its own terms. Some days, everything hums with possibility. Other days, the world feels sealed shut, like light can’t find its way in. I’ve learned not to fight that rhythm.

Photography, for me, isn’t about pressing the shutter. It’s about waiting for the city to breathe.
It’s about being still long enough to feel when the air shifts — when something invisible turns visible. The silence between frames is where the real work happens.

People sometimes ask how I know when to take the shot. The truth is, I don’t. I just stay there — standing in the cold, leaning on a wall, pretending to tie my shoes — and I listen. The sound of a lighter flicking. The pause before a tram door closes. A man glancing at his reflection in a shop window, not recognizing himself for half a second.

That’s the moment I’m chasing. Not the image itself, but the space before it becomes one.

When you spend enough time on the streets, you realize the world doesn’t perform for you. You have to earn your place in it. The best photographs I’ve taken came after hours of nothing — just silence, footsteps, light, and a kind of patience that feels like faith.

I think that’s why I love documentary work: it’s not about finding stories, it’s about noticing the ones that are already happening — quietly, constantly, in the spaces we never look twice at.

Maybe the silence between frames isn’t empty after all. Maybe it’s the only part that’s real.