There is something quietly poetic about a shadow. It follows you everywhere — up staircases, across concrete, beside parked motorcycles never asking permission, never announcing itself. These photographs catch that silent companion in honest, unposed moments.
Idoesn't show their face. Instead, they offer their silhouette: standing still on sun-warmed pavement, hand raised to take the very photo we're looking at. A self-portrait without features. An identity made of light and absence.
Below, the street carries on. Motorcycles line up in neat rows, their handlebar shadows stretching like antennae across the ground. Colorful jeepneys — yellow, blue, red — navigate a busy intersection, bold and loud against the pale concrete. Life in motion, captured from above.
The contrast is deliberate. The shadow is soft, still, personal. The street is vivid, crowded, noisy. Together they tell a small story about being present in a place — not as a tourist posing for the camera, but as someone who simply looked down, noticed the light, and pressed the shutter.
Sometimes the most honest self-portrait is the one that shows the least.
All photos in this post were originally taken by me Hive account@dondononardem using my oPPo A3x and manually edited in Adobe Lightroom.