Sometimes a wider framing that captures the rubbish inside the bin makes for an interesting comparison with the rubbish makers outside.
#streetphotography #streetart #streetbins #socialcommentary
Street photography using the aperture of street bins. Random crops of human behaviour - creators of more litter than any other species on the planet.
#streetphotography #streetart #streetbin #socialcommentary
Fast food has dramatically increased the amount of packaging waste. Fast photography, the obsession to take billions of pictures of food and post it on socials, has also cluttered our lives.
#throwaway looks at human behaviour through the lens of street bins. Perhaps we are the rubbish?
#streetphotography #streetart #streetbins
Same street bin. Same location. Different people. Waiting for magic to happen without having your eye to the lens or control of the focus is time consuming. None of these images would have made the final gallery show, but this is part of the “Throwaway” process that I wanted to share. The vast amount of photographs we capture on our mobile devices continue to accumulate often never to be looked at again, merely adding to our easily disposible lives.
#streetphotography #streetartist #streetbins
What I love most about blind shooting through street bins is the unexpected, the magic of the un-composed.
#streetphotography #streetart #streetbins #disruption
A nation of bag carrying consumers. Black Friday is upon us. What happened to buy once, buy well.
#steetphotography #streetlife #socialcommentary #streetart #streetbins
“Mobilemania”. Couldn’t possibly leave home without one. How do you carry yours?
Throwaway. Observing modern society through the apertures of street bins.
#socialcommentary #streetarteverywhere #streetphotography #streetbins #streetphotography
The number of single occupancy four seater vehicles driving within London everyday is estimated to be over a million. Not helping congestion or air quality. As opposed to electric buses.
#rubbishphotography #streetphotography #throwaway