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11 contributions to The Photography Club
Assignment #8: The Dark Tower
High above the sprawling, low-rise labyrinth of Bangkok metropolis, a dark lone tower breaks the horizon. A visual diary of its presence. A series of quiet, moody encounters with the neighbours it overlooks. Through man-made polluted haze and shifting light, the tower stands constrained but defiant, weaving a different story with every neighbouring building it touches. An exercise in controlled chaos—minimalism born from the spirit of Fan Ho
Assignment #8: The Dark Tower
1 like • Mar 23
The 3 words Monolithic — Ominous — Isolated - the architectural dominance (monolithic) - the storm-driven atmosphere (ominous) - the emotional distance and solitude (isolated)
1 like • 27d
@Emanuel Schi
Livecall recording 22.2.2026 - Assignment #6 and Talk
Today we had a lovely chat, about the photos of the last Assignment with the theme "Minimalism" and after that we had an amazing chat with @Lorenzo Zanna and @David Blacher about the diffrence between analog and digital pictures. It felt like a little podcast and is definitly worth a listen :)
Livecall recording 22.2.2026 - Assignment #6 and Talk
1 like • Feb 23
Is the assignment review meeting for premium members?
1 like • Feb 23
@Emanuel Schi Thank you for your reply!
Look inward for the inner peace
What genre do you think this image belong?
Look inward for the inner peace
2 likes • Feb 23
1. Street Photography because it’s candid, unstaged human activity in a public space, observed from within a vehicle, which adds a voyeuristic, observational perspective. 2. Documentary / Photojournalistic because it captures everyday life and cultural context (monks collecting alms), conveying social and cultural reality rather than a constructed scene. 3. Environmental Portraiture because the monks are depicted within their real environment, where context is integral to meaning.
Strangely Familiar Collection
The shots I think deserve some feedbacks. Please let me know what your thoughts are in the following aspects. - Composition - Story telling - Technicality
Strangely Familiar Collection
0 likes • Jan 23
@Wittawat Sadindum i will get back to you, must first attend to my wife 🥰
1 like • Jan 24
@Wittawat Sadindum 1. What do I see? A dark interior space. A window dominates the center-right of the frame. Behind the window’s frosted or textured glass, a human figure is visible only as a silhouette. The figure raises one hand, palm pressed or lifted toward the glass. Outside the window, a faint landscape or sky is visible, blurred by the textured surface. Another smaller window panel sits to the left, also opaque. No facial features are visible. Only the gesture of a raised hand and a body behind glass. The scene is monochrome or very muted in color. 2. how is it depicted? Composition Strong geometric framing: rectangular window panes inside the larger dark frame. The main window sits slightly right of center — giving visual weight and direction. The raised hand is placed near the upper third — a natural focal point. Large dark negative space surrounds the windows — emphasizing isolation. Lighting High contrast. The figure appears as a silhouette — no internal detail. Texture The glass has a dotted or frosted texture. This texture obscures clarity while still allowing shape recognition. Focus & Depth Everything is crisp where it needs to be: window edges, hand shape, texture. Depth is flattened — the scene becomes graphic and symbolic. Tone / Color Nearly black-and-white. Strong separation between luminous window and dark room. Minimal midtones — bold graphic style. Style Conceptual, cinematic, symbolic. Feels staged or carefully observed. Minimalist but emotionally charged. 3. Interpretation — what does the image express? This photograph speaks of separation and longing. A human stands behind a window — visible, but unreachable. The raised hand is a universal gesture: A greeting, a plea, a farewell or a desire to touch what lies beyond. But the glass intervenes. In the end it’s your choice, what resonates with your imagination and what you want to share.
1 like • Jan 23
a nice idea, do you the option of controlling the backgroud. The placement of your head in relation to the darker areas in the backgroud?
2 likes • Jan 23
@Wittawat Sadindum yes i think the hand is the main subject even though the head and upper body is bigger.
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@archi-badenhorst-5065
I enjoy photography

Active 2h ago
Joined Jan 20, 2026