Sunday, November 23, 2014
Tuesday, November 04, 2014
Monday, November 03, 2014
Saturday, November 01, 2014
Friday, October 31, 2014
Monday, October 27, 2014
Friday, October 17, 2014
From the other side
Labels:
2014,
hong kong,
judgemental,
other side,
self-reflection,
similar,
train,
trapped
Thursday, October 16, 2014
Love Series Continues... 010
Love in Hong Kong tonight.
My "Love Series" continues from here: http://davidchuaphotography.blogspot.hk/2012/01/love-series-009.html
Labels:
black and white,
couple,
hong kong,
hug,
love,
love series,
night,
passion,
security,
street,
street photography,
warmth,
youth
Saturday, August 30, 2014
Good Sleep
From a year 2011 recently self-processed negative. Negative has grown mouldy. Probably taken with Leica M6, 35cron and on APX400 film. |
At night in bed, I'll pray a short prayer next to him, asking Jesus to give him sweet dreams and a good night sleep. And he'll correct me by saying, "No! No dreams! A good sleep has no dreams."
He's absolutely right!
In the morning, I'll ask him, "Did you have a good sleep?" He'll usually say, "Yes!"
That's how simple life seems.
But today, I think of all the children in the world who's suffering. The ones who flee to the mountains to escape the killing of the ISIS, the ones who suffer hunger and the lack of clean water around the world, the ones kidnapped by syndicates and made beggars on the streets who probably having broken arms and legs, the ones dying from a terminal illness and suffering in pain, the ones brainwashed as young soldiers killing others... so on and so forth.
Could we just for a moment, daily, remember that we are indeed very fortunate?
Labels:
35cron,
agfa,
apx400,
black and white film,
blessed,
bliss,
child,
children,
contentment,
dreams,
expired film,
fortunate,
Leica M6,
mouldy film,
pray,
self-processed,
sleep,
suffering,
thankfulness
Friday, August 22, 2014
Life "stops" sometimes...
Agfa APX400, probably Leica M6 with 35cron, processed in DDX |
Lately, I have finally dug out dozens of my unprocessed films since 2011, a mixture of 35mm to 120mm, and even some 4x5 negatives, to process them. (the above is a frame from the first roll I begin scanning now in the early morning of 22 Aug 2014)
And it happens that today, 22 Aug 2014, is the official mourning day of MH17 crash victims in Malaysia. My unifi TV at home is showing the condolences message reminding us to mourn, as the bodies arrive back Malaysia today.
Life "stops" inside us sometimes, when something big, painful, or life-changing happens to us. That's the time when we begin so engrossed with what we are going through, mostly painful, struggling between moving on and lingering in our pain. Some of us are more sensitive in our emotions, some of us not. In this case, probably the less sensitive are more fortunate.
I am kinda surprised I can even remember some of the shots I took... the place, the mood, the situation I was in... after more than 3 years... but of course, I have problem remembering some of them.
The fact I stated year 2011 is also because of some of the shots I remember... the person/s in the frames, the places...
They always say, when you remember something so deeply, it's either an extremely happy or an extremely sad time you had.
If you look at my blog, you would have noticed I stopped blogging for more than 2-3 years. My life kinda "stopped" over things I was going through.
There's no doubt that pain is the best teacher in life, provided that we get through it, which we can if we keep at it. There are just too many things we don't have answers for, which we either keep on thinking and searching OR we move on and let the answers come to us (if they ever come to us). That's my way of moving on. I choose to take life easier, because life is too short and there's not enough time for me to do the things I love, and to love the people around me.
I am mourning for the lives lost in Iraq, in Syria, in Gaza, in MH17, in MH370, in Nigeria... we have seen much in the recent times.
May we treasure our lives and our loved ones and be contented with what we have daily, remembering our brains are just too little to understand God's ways in dealing with us. If we know we can't understand the whole picture, we shouldn't blame anyone.
Labels:
35cron,
bicycle,
black and white,
black and white film,
cycling,
emotions,
Indian,
Leica M6,
life,
motion,
movement,
pain,
stops,
thoughts on life,
window
Tuesday, August 19, 2014
No Retirement
An elderly in Singapore |
In Malaysia where I live as a Singaporean now, I see many elderly in MacDonalds too, but they are sitting at the tables eating and chatting away. They are also often seen in expensive restaurants, shopping malls, enjoying their retiree lives.
I am speaking in general.
The old lady above is collecting used tin cans to sell for a living, just in case some of you don't understand what she is doing.
I hope the recent announcement by our Singapore Prime Minister at the NDP rally will help the ageing problems in Singapore.
Labels:
2012,
black and white,
earn-a-living,
elderly,
granny,
old age,
recycling,
retirement,
ricoh grd3,
rubbish,
singapore,
street photography,
ultrawide
Sunday, August 17, 2014
Hungry Ghost Festival 2013
"I thought she wasn't there?" |
This photo is posted a year late. But now is Hungry Ghost Festival 2014 so I thought I should post this. I don't see them performing at the same spot this year. Time flies.
Taken with a Ricoh GR.
Sunday, July 13, 2014
The Need to Keep This Blog Alive
I am sorry to all my followers for not having been blogging here. But most of all, I think I owe myself the greatest apology for such inconsistence and for giving up.
A lot has been happening in my life especially inside of me that made me become reclusive. But overall, I think it's for the better.
When I look back at my blog posts in the past years since I started blogging, it's like looking at my diary. I am reminded of the feelings, the experiences and even to the details of my five senses of each different photos I posted, what I was going through at that time, and how I thought and felt. This is a good reminder that a visual diary can be more powerful than a written one sometimes.
Overall, I think I matured (not that I am willing to give up the child in me). I matured in knowing that the greatest regret one could possibly have at the time of death could be NOT HAVING BEEN TRUE TO ONESELF all those years. If I have to put up a pretense all my life, I think it's better to be dead.
I've always believed that our photographs that we take represent us. We are all attracted to capture what interests and draws us. And often, that which draws us are things that are closest to our hearts, things that are deep within us, things that we long for, things that we are angry at, things that we are still struggling to overcome, things that we miss.
But the unfortunate(or fortunate) thing in this world is most people don't look at a photograph long enough to understand it, or interpret it. It's at the same time fortunate because we can still have our little secrets hidden in our photographs that only we ourselves know what it's all about.
That keeps us shooting, even with the lack of appreciative audience, the lack of understanding from others.
After all, we have to ask ourselves. Do we shoot for others or do we shoot for ourselves? If it's my personal visual diary, I don't shoot for anyone else but myself.
If you are still reading till here, you probably understand at least half of what I have said. If you aren't, you belong to the common crowd out there who's probably more interested in other stuff in life.
So, photography should go beyond what's right and wrong (as long as you are technically competent in achieving what you want). Photography is NOT about shooting to please others (of course you can't do that to your clients).
If no one ever put a "like" on your photos, will you still continue to shoot and share?
A lot has been happening in my life especially inside of me that made me become reclusive. But overall, I think it's for the better.
When I look back at my blog posts in the past years since I started blogging, it's like looking at my diary. I am reminded of the feelings, the experiences and even to the details of my five senses of each different photos I posted, what I was going through at that time, and how I thought and felt. This is a good reminder that a visual diary can be more powerful than a written one sometimes.
Overall, I think I matured (not that I am willing to give up the child in me). I matured in knowing that the greatest regret one could possibly have at the time of death could be NOT HAVING BEEN TRUE TO ONESELF all those years. If I have to put up a pretense all my life, I think it's better to be dead.
I've always believed that our photographs that we take represent us. We are all attracted to capture what interests and draws us. And often, that which draws us are things that are closest to our hearts, things that are deep within us, things that we long for, things that we are angry at, things that we are still struggling to overcome, things that we miss.
But the unfortunate(or fortunate) thing in this world is most people don't look at a photograph long enough to understand it, or interpret it. It's at the same time fortunate because we can still have our little secrets hidden in our photographs that only we ourselves know what it's all about.
That keeps us shooting, even with the lack of appreciative audience, the lack of understanding from others.
After all, we have to ask ourselves. Do we shoot for others or do we shoot for ourselves? If it's my personal visual diary, I don't shoot for anyone else but myself.
If you are still reading till here, you probably understand at least half of what I have said. If you aren't, you belong to the common crowd out there who's probably more interested in other stuff in life.
So, photography should go beyond what's right and wrong (as long as you are technically competent in achieving what you want). Photography is NOT about shooting to please others (of course you can't do that to your clients).
If no one ever put a "like" on your photos, will you still continue to shoot and share?
Labels:
death,
experiences,
honesty,
life,
maturity,
reclusive,
thoughts on life,
thoughts on photography,
true,
visual diary
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