

Of course you are waisting a lot of film, but that's expected. Some of the pictures I've gotten this way are priceless for me.
"...In a distant province, by the sea..."
Emir Shabashvili was born in a small town Yelabuga situated in now obsolete Republic of Soviet Tataria which was in turn part of country named Soviet Union, now also long gone...>>more...
Born in 1957 in Soviet
I have been using the media as an amateur for the most of my life and came to a serious photography in late 90s. But it had not become my passion until after moving from Russia to the USA I started the “Walking downtown” project related to the urban environments and to the interaction of humankind with the “machine” it build to “live in”.
The project had resulted in 2 books I have published:
“La Machine a Habiter”
"Selected photographs"
I have never stopped and still working today along the same lines.
The primary subject is an American downtown as a place where nothing considered to be permanent and indispensable, where people seem to be small and unimportant part of the structure, almost parasites in the huge body made of white metal, dark glass and artificial stone.
The only way one survives in this strange machine is by carrying a home, the real one – inside. We carry our homes like hermit-crab carries its shell. I know this because I am the one who still carries the same one‑story wooden house with extra attic room once been mine...
This is great. I am glad to see street photography is still alive. You do not hear much on this style anymore but it certainly is an art and a skill that is developed. Seems like street photography started to fade away when digital came on the scene. Not sure what it is but street photography is best done on film. What better a camera to do it with than Olympus? They made some great equipment
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