
Issue III
July 2026
"We are always, will always be, in mid sentence."
Something lives in the in-between. In the breath before the word, the pause before the gesture, the fraction of a second when the shutter opens and closes and the world is held still — not frozen, but suspended, as if asking to be understood. This issue lives there too.
The photographers here are drawn to thresholds. To the places where one thing has not yet become another. There is no resolution in these images, and that is deliberate. Resolution would be a kind of dishonesty.
To be a person is to be perpetually mid-sentence. We are all, always, in some form of transition — between versions of ourselves, between the lives we planned and the lives we're living, between what we've lost and what we haven't found yet. The camera catches us there. The best photographs always do.
The nine photographers in this issue work across different countries, different traditions, different ideas of what a photograph is for. And yet, reading through their work, you notice something — a shared instinct toward the interior. Toward what is half-seen, half-said. Whether it's Manuela Frattini dissolving the face into abstraction, Grit Brune finding geometry in the city's shadows, or Nadia Eeckhout pressing her lens against glass, these are images that don't hand themselves over easily. They ask you to slow down.
That's what this journal has always been interested in — photography that resists the scroll. Work that has a patience to it, a point of view that was earned rather than filtered.
We're glad you're here for Issue 3. As always, take your time with each photographer. There's no rush.





Between the Inner Self and the World
Vlada de Nooij
“Navigating the space where personal reflection meets external realities..…” Read more →

Looking through Windows
Nadia Eeckhout
“Observations framed by distance and perspective…” Read more →

La Marinera del Alma
Michele Agostinis
“An intimate visual journey into the soul of Marinera,…” Read more →


The Streets that Shaped Me
Hugo Lee
“A visual memoir of the streets that inspired a way of seeing, and storytelling…” Read more →

A photography journal. Published monthly.
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