There are moments during a photo session when time seems to stop.
While waiting for the little girl
; the one year old star of the day; to smile again at my lens, the scene began to speak to me in a different way. Suddenly, the stillness around us became as powerful as the session itself.
That’s when I lifted my camera, not to capture people, but to capture the spaces that held the silence between one frame and the next.
The reflection on the pond, the calm red of a pavilion standing firm against the breeze, the flowers opening quietly under the sun; they were all part of the same vital rhythm I had been chasing moments before in a child’s gaze.
These photographs were born in that invisible interval where the photographer stops searching and starts truly observing.
Technical details and the soul behind the glass
I used my Canon 5D Mark III, switching between several lenses according to the impulse and emotion of each scene:
• Helios – for that nostalgic bokeh that breathes memory.
• Praktica 135mm f/2.8 – to isolate and find silence amid color.
• Pentacon 29mm f/2.8 – to open the frame and let the composition breathe.
• Canon 70–300mm f/4–5.6 and Nikon 80–200mm f/2.8 – to capture from a distance without losing connection.
• Canon 50mm f/1.8 – my most honest lens, always finding light even where it seems absent.
The whole series reflects that balance between contemplation and technique; between the rush of work and the quiet the art demands to truly see.
Sometimes, the best photograph isn’t the one you plan; it’s the one that finds you in a moment of pause.
These images are exactly that: a reminder that beauty also blooms when we stop searching for it.