Your search:
349 result(s) in 0.11 s
-
DUKAS_189866266_NUR
Autumn Colors In An Abandoned Place
An old damaged car lies overturned and covered in graffiti among colorful autumn trees in Neukirchen, Germany, on October 10, 2025. The surrounding vegetation starts to reclaim the area, highlighting the contrast between human decay and natural renewal. (Photo by Michael Nguyen/NurPhoto) -
DUKAS_183623943_POL
Prypiat River Station in the Chornobyl Exclusion Zone
Rusty bollards remain on a berth of the Prypiat River Station in the Chornobyl Exclusion Zone, Prypiat, Kyiv region, Ukraine, on April 12, 2025. (Photo by Volodymyr Tarasov/Ukrinform) (FOTO:DUKAS/POLARIS)
Ukrinform -
DUKAS_183623806_POL
Prypiat River Station in the Chornobyl Exclusion Zone
Rusty bollards remain on a berth of the Prypiat River Station in the Chornobyl Exclusion Zone, Prypiat, Kyiv region, Ukraine, on April 12, 2025. (Photo by Volodymyr Tarasov/Ukrinform) (FOTO:DUKAS/POLARIS)
Ukrinform -
DUKAS_146354598_COY
LeAnn Rimes and her husband Eddie Cibrian are seen taking their dog, Fleetwood Rimes Cibrian to the vet in Encino.
EXCLUSIVE. Coleman-Rayner
Los Angeles, CA, USA. November 1, 2022
LeAnn Rimes and her husband Eddie Cibrian are seen taking their dog, Fleetwood Rimes Cibrian to the vet in Encino. The 40-year-old singer just released a new song called ñSpaceshipî and the music video was directed by her 49-year-old husband. LeAnn wore a rust colored sweatsuit, light brown shearling boots and carried a Louis Vuitton multi-pochette crossbody bag. Eddie wore gray t-shirt, jeans and Nike sneakers.
CREDIT MUST READ: Coleman-Rayner
Tel US (001) 310-474-4343 - office
www.coleman-rayner.com
(c) Dukas -
DUKAS_130790288_COY
Portrait photos of Hollywood producer Stephen Wozniak, who has given an interview about his friendship and memories of tragic cinematographer Halyna Hutchins
EXCLUSIVE. Coleman-Rayner
Los Angeles, CA, USA. October 22, 2021
Portrait photos of Hollywood producer Stephen Wozniak, who has given an interview about his friendship and memories of tragic cinematographer Halyna Hutchins, who was accidentally shot dead by actor Alec Baldwin in a stunt gone wrong on a movie set in New Mexico.
CREDIT MUST READ: Courtesy Stephen Wozniak/Coleman-Rayner
Tel US (001) 310 474 4343 – office
www.coleman-rayner.com
(c) Dukas -
DUKAS_126946032_COY
Leighton Meester, 35, and her husband Adam Brody, 41, are seen with their son leaving the beach after surfing.
EXCLUSIVE. Coleman-Rayner
Los Angeles, CA, USA. July 14, 2021
Leighton Meester, 35, and her husband Adam Brody, 41, are seen with their son leaving the beach after surfing.
The star of Gossip Girl wore a khaki colored romper, a rust colored bikini top and Ray Ban sunglasses.
*** Please pixelate children's faces before publication.***
CREDIT MUST READ: Coleman-Rayner
Tel US (001) 310-474-4343- office
www.coleman-rayner.com
(c) Dukas -
DUKAS_126946024_COY
Leighton Meester, 35, and her husband Adam Brody, 41, are seen with their son leaving the beach after surfing.
EXCLUSIVE. Coleman-Rayner
Los Angeles, CA, USA. July 14, 2021
Leighton Meester, 35, and her husband Adam Brody, 41, are seen with their son leaving the beach after surfing.
The star of Gossip Girl wore a khaki colored romper, a rust colored bikini top and Ray Ban sunglasses.
*** Please pixelate children's faces before publication.***
CREDIT MUST READ: Coleman-Rayner
Tel US (001) 310-474-4343- office
www.coleman-rayner.com
(c) Dukas -
DUKAS_126946007_COY
Leighton Meester, 35, and her husband Adam Brody, 41, are seen with their son leaving the beach after surfing.
EXCLUSIVE. Coleman-Rayner
Los Angeles, CA, USA. July 14, 2021
Leighton Meester, 35, and her husband Adam Brody, 41, are seen with their son leaving the beach after surfing.
The star of Gossip Girl wore a khaki colored romper, a rust colored bikini top and Ray Ban sunglasses.
*** Please pixelate children's faces before publication.***
CREDIT MUST READ: Coleman-Rayner
Tel US (001) 310-474-4343- office
www.coleman-rayner.com
(c) Dukas -
DUKAS_122410485_EYE
Locked down in Brighton ñ in pictures. Photographer Antonio Olmos takes his daily exercise along the 3km beachfront in Brighton and Hove documenting 423 of the beach huts.
Brighton Beach Hut Locks. There are 459 Beach Huts in Brighton & Hove. They are along a stretch of just under 3 kilometers along the seafront from Hove Lawns to Hove Lagoon. The photographs refelct the various shades of colour painted on the doors. They also show the weathered look of the door paint of some of the huts. The locks vary from new locks to rusted locks that have been rusted by the salty sea air of the Brighton seafront. ÖÖ.The Text by the Photographer ìI have had to spend a lot of time in Brighton for personal reasons since November, travelling back and forth from London. In the times I have been in Brighton I have been on the lookout for Lockdown photographs. It has meant that I was attracted to the beach looking for something that illustrated lockdown. Brighton is much quieter. Even in winter it can be packed with visitors. But in this latest lockdown it has been eerily quiet in comparison. The beachfront is still filled with locals exercising and walking. I found it hard to make photos unless the sun was shining and the sunset light was glorious. And that was rare when I was in Brighton.
At first I tried to make normal pics of the beachfront with the colourful beach huts as background. They seem to be the only colour in a dreary winter day. But the more I looked at the Beach Huts the more I zeroed in on the locks. Their metallic shiny surfaces most of the time were a great contrast to the colourful paint that the doors of the hut were painted with. The locks and the paint were a great contrast. Even more so when the locks were rusty from the salty air or the paint on the hut was peeling from neglect. Photographing the locks became a metaphor for lockdown for me. I have always liked doing Photo Typolgogies, a photographic record of similar types. You photograph the same thing over and over to create order and uniformity but at the same time reflect on the differences.
There are 459 Beach Huts that line the seafront in Hove along a str
© Guardian / eyevine. All Rights Reserved. -
DUKAS_122410617_EYE
Locked down in Brighton ñ in pictures. Photographer Antonio Olmos takes his daily exercise along the 3km beachfront in Brighton and Hove documenting 423 of the beach huts.
Brighton Beach Hut Locks. There are 459 Beach Huts in Brighton & Hove. They are along a stretch of just under 3 kilometers along the seafront from Hove Lawns to Hove Lagoon. The photographs refelct the various shades of colour painted on the doors. They also show the weathered look of the door paint of some of the huts. The locks vary from new locks to rusted locks that have been rusted by the salty sea air of the Brighton seafront. ÖÖ.The Text by the Photographer ìI have had to spend a lot of time in Brighton for personal reasons since November, travelling back and forth from London. In the times I have been in Brighton I have been on the lookout for Lockdown photographs. It has meant that I was attracted to the beach looking for something that illustrated lockdown. Brighton is much quieter. Even in winter it can be packed with visitors. But in this latest lockdown it has been eerily quiet in comparison. The beachfront is still filled with locals exercising and walking. I found it hard to make photos unless the sun was shining and the sunset light was glorious. And that was rare when I was in Brighton.
At first I tried to make normal pics of the beachfront with the colourful beach huts as background. They seem to be the only colour in a dreary winter day. But the more I looked at the Beach Huts the more I zeroed in on the locks. Their metallic shiny surfaces most of the time were a great contrast to the colourful paint that the doors of the hut were painted with. The locks and the paint were a great contrast. Even more so when the locks were rusty from the salty air or the paint on the hut was peeling from neglect. Photographing the locks became a metaphor for lockdown for me. I have always liked doing Photo Typolgogies, a photographic record of similar types. You photograph the same thing over and over to create order and uniformity but at the same time reflect on the differences.
There are 459 Beach Huts that line the seafront in Hove along a str
© Guardian / eyevine. All Rights Reserved. -
DUKAS_122410483_EYE
Locked down in Brighton ñ in pictures. Photographer Antonio Olmos takes his daily exercise along the 3km beachfront in Brighton and Hove documenting 423 of the beach huts.
Brighton Beach Hut Locks. There are 459 Beach Huts in Brighton & Hove. They are along a stretch of just under 3 kilometers along the seafront from Hove Lawns to Hove Lagoon. The photographs refelct the various shades of colour painted on the doors. They also show the weathered look of the door paint of some of the huts. The locks vary from new locks to rusted locks that have been rusted by the salty sea air of the Brighton seafront. ÖÖ.The Text by the Photographer ìI have had to spend a lot of time in Brighton for personal reasons since November, travelling back and forth from London. In the times I have been in Brighton I have been on the lookout for Lockdown photographs. It has meant that I was attracted to the beach looking for something that illustrated lockdown. Brighton is much quieter. Even in winter it can be packed with visitors. But in this latest lockdown it has been eerily quiet in comparison. The beachfront is still filled with locals exercising and walking. I found it hard to make photos unless the sun was shining and the sunset light was glorious. And that was rare when I was in Brighton.
At first I tried to make normal pics of the beachfront with the colourful beach huts as background. They seem to be the only colour in a dreary winter day. But the more I looked at the Beach Huts the more I zeroed in on the locks. Their metallic shiny surfaces most of the time were a great contrast to the colourful paint that the doors of the hut were painted with. The locks and the paint were a great contrast. Even more so when the locks were rusty from the salty air or the paint on the hut was peeling from neglect. Photographing the locks became a metaphor for lockdown for me. I have always liked doing Photo Typolgogies, a photographic record of similar types. You photograph the same thing over and over to create order and uniformity but at the same time reflect on the differences.
There are 459 Beach Huts that line the seafront in Hove along a str
© Guardian / eyevine. All Rights Reserved. -
DUKAS_122410729_EYE
Locked down in Brighton ñ in pictures. Photographer Antonio Olmos takes his daily exercise along the 3km beachfront in Brighton and Hove documenting 423 of the beach huts.
Brighton Beach Hut Locks. There are 459 Beach Huts in Brighton & Hove. They are along a stretch of just under 3 kilometers along the seafront from Hove Lawns to Hove Lagoon. The photographs refelct the various shades of colour painted on the doors. They also show the weathered look of the door paint of some of the huts. The locks vary from new locks to rusted locks that have been rusted by the salty sea air of the Brighton seafront. ÖÖ.The Text by the Photographer ìI have had to spend a lot of time in Brighton for personal reasons since November, travelling back and forth from London. In the times I have been in Brighton I have been on the lookout for Lockdown photographs. It has meant that I was attracted to the beach looking for something that illustrated lockdown. Brighton is much quieter. Even in winter it can be packed with visitors. But in this latest lockdown it has been eerily quiet in comparison. The beachfront is still filled with locals exercising and walking. I found it hard to make photos unless the sun was shining and the sunset light was glorious. And that was rare when I was in Brighton.
At first I tried to make normal pics of the beachfront with the colourful beach huts as background. They seem to be the only colour in a dreary winter day. But the more I looked at the Beach Huts the more I zeroed in on the locks. Their metallic shiny surfaces most of the time were a great contrast to the colourful paint that the doors of the hut were painted with. The locks and the paint were a great contrast. Even more so when the locks were rusty from the salty air or the paint on the hut was peeling from neglect. Photographing the locks became a metaphor for lockdown for me. I have always liked doing Photo Typolgogies, a photographic record of similar types. You photograph the same thing over and over to create order and uniformity but at the same time reflect on the differences.
There are 459 Beach Huts that line the seafront in Hove along a str
© Guardian / eyevine. All Rights Reserved. -
DUKAS_122410566_EYE
Locked down in Brighton ñ in pictures. Photographer Antonio Olmos takes his daily exercise along the 3km beachfront in Brighton and Hove documenting 423 of the beach huts.
Brighton Beach Hut Locks. There are 459 Beach Huts in Brighton & Hove. They are along a stretch of just under 3 kilometers along the seafront from Hove Lawns to Hove Lagoon. The photographs refelct the various shades of colour painted on the doors. They also show the weathered look of the door paint of some of the huts. The locks vary from new locks to rusted locks that have been rusted by the salty sea air of the Brighton seafront. ÖÖ.The Text by the Photographer ìI have had to spend a lot of time in Brighton for personal reasons since November, travelling back and forth from London. In the times I have been in Brighton I have been on the lookout for Lockdown photographs. It has meant that I was attracted to the beach looking for something that illustrated lockdown. Brighton is much quieter. Even in winter it can be packed with visitors. But in this latest lockdown it has been eerily quiet in comparison. The beachfront is still filled with locals exercising and walking. I found it hard to make photos unless the sun was shining and the sunset light was glorious. And that was rare when I was in Brighton.
At first I tried to make normal pics of the beachfront with the colourful beach huts as background. They seem to be the only colour in a dreary winter day. But the more I looked at the Beach Huts the more I zeroed in on the locks. Their metallic shiny surfaces most of the time were a great contrast to the colourful paint that the doors of the hut were painted with. The locks and the paint were a great contrast. Even more so when the locks were rusty from the salty air or the paint on the hut was peeling from neglect. Photographing the locks became a metaphor for lockdown for me. I have always liked doing Photo Typolgogies, a photographic record of similar types. You photograph the same thing over and over to create order and uniformity but at the same time reflect on the differences.
There are 459 Beach Huts that line the seafront in Hove along a str
© Guardian / eyevine. All Rights Reserved. -
DUKAS_122410637_EYE
Locked down in Brighton ñ in pictures. Photographer Antonio Olmos takes his daily exercise along the 3km beachfront in Brighton and Hove documenting 423 of the beach huts.
Brighton Beach Hut Locks. There are 459 Beach Huts in Brighton & Hove. They are along a stretch of just under 3 kilometers along the seafront from Hove Lawns to Hove Lagoon. The photographs refelct the various shades of colour painted on the doors. They also show the weathered look of the door paint of some of the huts. The locks vary from new locks to rusted locks that have been rusted by the salty sea air of the Brighton seafront. ÖÖ.The Text by the Photographer ìI have had to spend a lot of time in Brighton for personal reasons since November, travelling back and forth from London. In the times I have been in Brighton I have been on the lookout for Lockdown photographs. It has meant that I was attracted to the beach looking for something that illustrated lockdown. Brighton is much quieter. Even in winter it can be packed with visitors. But in this latest lockdown it has been eerily quiet in comparison. The beachfront is still filled with locals exercising and walking. I found it hard to make photos unless the sun was shining and the sunset light was glorious. And that was rare when I was in Brighton.
At first I tried to make normal pics of the beachfront with the colourful beach huts as background. They seem to be the only colour in a dreary winter day. But the more I looked at the Beach Huts the more I zeroed in on the locks. Their metallic shiny surfaces most of the time were a great contrast to the colourful paint that the doors of the hut were painted with. The locks and the paint were a great contrast. Even more so when the locks were rusty from the salty air or the paint on the hut was peeling from neglect. Photographing the locks became a metaphor for lockdown for me. I have always liked doing Photo Typolgogies, a photographic record of similar types. You photograph the same thing over and over to create order and uniformity but at the same time reflect on the differences.
There are 459 Beach Huts that line the seafront in Hove along a str
© Guardian / eyevine. All Rights Reserved. -
DUKAS_122410533_EYE
Locked down in Brighton ñ in pictures. Photographer Antonio Olmos takes his daily exercise along the 3km beachfront in Brighton and Hove documenting 423 of the beach huts.
Brighton Beach Hut Locks. There are 459 Beach Huts in Brighton & Hove. They are along a stretch of just under 3 kilometers along the seafront from Hove Lawns to Hove Lagoon. The photographs refelct the various shades of colour painted on the doors. They also show the weathered look of the door paint of some of the huts. The locks vary from new locks to rusted locks that have been rusted by the salty sea air of the Brighton seafront. ÖÖ.The Text by the Photographer ìI have had to spend a lot of time in Brighton for personal reasons since November, travelling back and forth from London. In the times I have been in Brighton I have been on the lookout for Lockdown photographs. It has meant that I was attracted to the beach looking for something that illustrated lockdown. Brighton is much quieter. Even in winter it can be packed with visitors. But in this latest lockdown it has been eerily quiet in comparison. The beachfront is still filled with locals exercising and walking. I found it hard to make photos unless the sun was shining and the sunset light was glorious. And that was rare when I was in Brighton.
At first I tried to make normal pics of the beachfront with the colourful beach huts as background. They seem to be the only colour in a dreary winter day. But the more I looked at the Beach Huts the more I zeroed in on the locks. Their metallic shiny surfaces most of the time were a great contrast to the colourful paint that the doors of the hut were painted with. The locks and the paint were a great contrast. Even more so when the locks were rusty from the salty air or the paint on the hut was peeling from neglect. Photographing the locks became a metaphor for lockdown for me. I have always liked doing Photo Typolgogies, a photographic record of similar types. You photograph the same thing over and over to create order and uniformity but at the same time reflect on the differences.
There are 459 Beach Huts that line the seafront in Hove along a str
© Guardian / eyevine. All Rights Reserved. -
DUKAS_122410515_EYE
Locked down in Brighton ñ in pictures. Photographer Antonio Olmos takes his daily exercise along the 3km beachfront in Brighton and Hove documenting 423 of the beach huts.
Brighton Beach Hut Locks. There are 459 Beach Huts in Brighton & Hove. They are along a stretch of just under 3 kilometers along the seafront from Hove Lawns to Hove Lagoon. The photographs refelct the various shades of colour painted on the doors. They also show the weathered look of the door paint of some of the huts. The locks vary from new locks to rusted locks that have been rusted by the salty sea air of the Brighton seafront. ÖÖ.The Text by the Photographer ìI have had to spend a lot of time in Brighton for personal reasons since November, travelling back and forth from London. In the times I have been in Brighton I have been on the lookout for Lockdown photographs. It has meant that I was attracted to the beach looking for something that illustrated lockdown. Brighton is much quieter. Even in winter it can be packed with visitors. But in this latest lockdown it has been eerily quiet in comparison. The beachfront is still filled with locals exercising and walking. I found it hard to make photos unless the sun was shining and the sunset light was glorious. And that was rare when I was in Brighton.
At first I tried to make normal pics of the beachfront with the colourful beach huts as background. They seem to be the only colour in a dreary winter day. But the more I looked at the Beach Huts the more I zeroed in on the locks. Their metallic shiny surfaces most of the time were a great contrast to the colourful paint that the doors of the hut were painted with. The locks and the paint were a great contrast. Even more so when the locks were rusty from the salty air or the paint on the hut was peeling from neglect. Photographing the locks became a metaphor for lockdown for me. I have always liked doing Photo Typolgogies, a photographic record of similar types. You photograph the same thing over and over to create order and uniformity but at the same time reflect on the differences.
There are 459 Beach Huts that line the seafront in Hove along a str
© Guardian / eyevine. All Rights Reserved. -
DUKAS_122410562_EYE
Locked down in Brighton ñ in pictures. Photographer Antonio Olmos takes his daily exercise along the 3km beachfront in Brighton and Hove documenting 423 of the beach huts.
Brighton Beach Hut Locks. There are 459 Beach Huts in Brighton & Hove. They are along a stretch of just under 3 kilometers along the seafront from Hove Lawns to Hove Lagoon. The photographs refelct the various shades of colour painted on the doors. They also show the weathered look of the door paint of some of the huts. The locks vary from new locks to rusted locks that have been rusted by the salty sea air of the Brighton seafront. ÖÖ.The Text by the Photographer ìI have had to spend a lot of time in Brighton for personal reasons since November, travelling back and forth from London. In the times I have been in Brighton I have been on the lookout for Lockdown photographs. It has meant that I was attracted to the beach looking for something that illustrated lockdown. Brighton is much quieter. Even in winter it can be packed with visitors. But in this latest lockdown it has been eerily quiet in comparison. The beachfront is still filled with locals exercising and walking. I found it hard to make photos unless the sun was shining and the sunset light was glorious. And that was rare when I was in Brighton.
At first I tried to make normal pics of the beachfront with the colourful beach huts as background. They seem to be the only colour in a dreary winter day. But the more I looked at the Beach Huts the more I zeroed in on the locks. Their metallic shiny surfaces most of the time were a great contrast to the colourful paint that the doors of the hut were painted with. The locks and the paint were a great contrast. Even more so when the locks were rusty from the salty air or the paint on the hut was peeling from neglect. Photographing the locks became a metaphor for lockdown for me. I have always liked doing Photo Typolgogies, a photographic record of similar types. You photograph the same thing over and over to create order and uniformity but at the same time reflect on the differences.
There are 459 Beach Huts that line the seafront in Hove along a str
© Guardian / eyevine. All Rights Reserved. -
DUKAS_122410514_EYE
Locked down in Brighton ñ in pictures. Photographer Antonio Olmos takes his daily exercise along the 3km beachfront in Brighton and Hove documenting 423 of the beach huts.
Brighton Beach Hut Locks. There are 459 Beach Huts in Brighton & Hove. They are along a stretch of just under 3 kilometers along the seafront from Hove Lawns to Hove Lagoon. The photographs refelct the various shades of colour painted on the doors. They also show the weathered look of the door paint of some of the huts. The locks vary from new locks to rusted locks that have been rusted by the salty sea air of the Brighton seafront. ÖÖ.The Text by the Photographer ìI have had to spend a lot of time in Brighton for personal reasons since November, travelling back and forth from London. In the times I have been in Brighton I have been on the lookout for Lockdown photographs. It has meant that I was attracted to the beach looking for something that illustrated lockdown. Brighton is much quieter. Even in winter it can be packed with visitors. But in this latest lockdown it has been eerily quiet in comparison. The beachfront is still filled with locals exercising and walking. I found it hard to make photos unless the sun was shining and the sunset light was glorious. And that was rare when I was in Brighton.
At first I tried to make normal pics of the beachfront with the colourful beach huts as background. They seem to be the only colour in a dreary winter day. But the more I looked at the Beach Huts the more I zeroed in on the locks. Their metallic shiny surfaces most of the time were a great contrast to the colourful paint that the doors of the hut were painted with. The locks and the paint were a great contrast. Even more so when the locks were rusty from the salty air or the paint on the hut was peeling from neglect. Photographing the locks became a metaphor for lockdown for me. I have always liked doing Photo Typolgogies, a photographic record of similar types. You photograph the same thing over and over to create order and uniformity but at the same time reflect on the differences.
There are 459 Beach Huts that line the seafront in Hove along a str
© Guardian / eyevine. All Rights Reserved. -
DUKAS_122410726_EYE
Locked down in Brighton ñ in pictures. Photographer Antonio Olmos takes his daily exercise along the 3km beachfront in Brighton and Hove documenting 423 of the beach huts.
Brighton Beach Hut Locks. There are 459 Beach Huts in Brighton & Hove. They are along a stretch of just under 3 kilometers along the seafront from Hove Lawns to Hove Lagoon. The photographs refelct the various shades of colour painted on the doors. They also show the weathered look of the door paint of some of the huts. The locks vary from new locks to rusted locks that have been rusted by the salty sea air of the Brighton seafront. ÖÖ.The Text by the Photographer ìI have had to spend a lot of time in Brighton for personal reasons since November, travelling back and forth from London. In the times I have been in Brighton I have been on the lookout for Lockdown photographs. It has meant that I was attracted to the beach looking for something that illustrated lockdown. Brighton is much quieter. Even in winter it can be packed with visitors. But in this latest lockdown it has been eerily quiet in comparison. The beachfront is still filled with locals exercising and walking. I found it hard to make photos unless the sun was shining and the sunset light was glorious. And that was rare when I was in Brighton.
At first I tried to make normal pics of the beachfront with the colourful beach huts as background. They seem to be the only colour in a dreary winter day. But the more I looked at the Beach Huts the more I zeroed in on the locks. Their metallic shiny surfaces most of the time were a great contrast to the colourful paint that the doors of the hut were painted with. The locks and the paint were a great contrast. Even more so when the locks were rusty from the salty air or the paint on the hut was peeling from neglect. Photographing the locks became a metaphor for lockdown for me. I have always liked doing Photo Typolgogies, a photographic record of similar types. You photograph the same thing over and over to create order and uniformity but at the same time reflect on the differences.
There are 459 Beach Huts that line the seafront in Hove along a str
© Guardian / eyevine. All Rights Reserved. -
DUKAS_122410677_EYE
Locked down in Brighton ñ in pictures. Photographer Antonio Olmos takes his daily exercise along the 3km beachfront in Brighton and Hove documenting 423 of the beach huts.
Brighton Beach Hut Locks. There are 459 Beach Huts in Brighton & Hove. They are along a stretch of just under 3 kilometers along the seafront from Hove Lawns to Hove Lagoon. The photographs refelct the various shades of colour painted on the doors. They also show the weathered look of the door paint of some of the huts. The locks vary from new locks to rusted locks that have been rusted by the salty sea air of the Brighton seafront. ÖÖ.The Text by the Photographer ìI have had to spend a lot of time in Brighton for personal reasons since November, travelling back and forth from London. In the times I have been in Brighton I have been on the lookout for Lockdown photographs. It has meant that I was attracted to the beach looking for something that illustrated lockdown. Brighton is much quieter. Even in winter it can be packed with visitors. But in this latest lockdown it has been eerily quiet in comparison. The beachfront is still filled with locals exercising and walking. I found it hard to make photos unless the sun was shining and the sunset light was glorious. And that was rare when I was in Brighton.
At first I tried to make normal pics of the beachfront with the colourful beach huts as background. They seem to be the only colour in a dreary winter day. But the more I looked at the Beach Huts the more I zeroed in on the locks. Their metallic shiny surfaces most of the time were a great contrast to the colourful paint that the doors of the hut were painted with. The locks and the paint were a great contrast. Even more so when the locks were rusty from the salty air or the paint on the hut was peeling from neglect. Photographing the locks became a metaphor for lockdown for me. I have always liked doing Photo Typolgogies, a photographic record of similar types. You photograph the same thing over and over to create order and uniformity but at the same time reflect on the differences.
There are 459 Beach Huts that line the seafront in Hove along a str
© Guardian / eyevine. All Rights Reserved. -
DUKAS_122410541_EYE
Locked down in Brighton ñ in pictures. Photographer Antonio Olmos takes his daily exercise along the 3km beachfront in Brighton and Hove documenting 423 of the beach huts.
Brighton Beach Hut Locks. There are 459 Beach Huts in Brighton & Hove. They are along a stretch of just under 3 kilometers along the seafront from Hove Lawns to Hove Lagoon. The photographs refelct the various shades of colour painted on the doors. They also show the weathered look of the door paint of some of the huts. The locks vary from new locks to rusted locks that have been rusted by the salty sea air of the Brighton seafront. ÖÖ.The Text by the Photographer ìI have had to spend a lot of time in Brighton for personal reasons since November, travelling back and forth from London. In the times I have been in Brighton I have been on the lookout for Lockdown photographs. It has meant that I was attracted to the beach looking for something that illustrated lockdown. Brighton is much quieter. Even in winter it can be packed with visitors. But in this latest lockdown it has been eerily quiet in comparison. The beachfront is still filled with locals exercising and walking. I found it hard to make photos unless the sun was shining and the sunset light was glorious. And that was rare when I was in Brighton.
At first I tried to make normal pics of the beachfront with the colourful beach huts as background. They seem to be the only colour in a dreary winter day. But the more I looked at the Beach Huts the more I zeroed in on the locks. Their metallic shiny surfaces most of the time were a great contrast to the colourful paint that the doors of the hut were painted with. The locks and the paint were a great contrast. Even more so when the locks were rusty from the salty air or the paint on the hut was peeling from neglect. Photographing the locks became a metaphor for lockdown for me. I have always liked doing Photo Typolgogies, a photographic record of similar types. You photograph the same thing over and over to create order and uniformity but at the same time reflect on the differences.
There are 459 Beach Huts that line the seafront in Hove along a str
© Guardian / eyevine. All Rights Reserved. -
DUKAS_122410490_EYE
Locked down in Brighton ñ in pictures. Photographer Antonio Olmos takes his daily exercise along the 3km beachfront in Brighton and Hove documenting 423 of the beach huts.
Brighton Beach Hut Locks. There are 459 Beach Huts in Brighton & Hove. They are along a stretch of just under 3 kilometers along the seafront from Hove Lawns to Hove Lagoon. The photographs refelct the various shades of colour painted on the doors. They also show the weathered look of the door paint of some of the huts. The locks vary from new locks to rusted locks that have been rusted by the salty sea air of the Brighton seafront. ÖÖ.The Text by the Photographer ìI have had to spend a lot of time in Brighton for personal reasons since November, travelling back and forth from London. In the times I have been in Brighton I have been on the lookout for Lockdown photographs. It has meant that I was attracted to the beach looking for something that illustrated lockdown. Brighton is much quieter. Even in winter it can be packed with visitors. But in this latest lockdown it has been eerily quiet in comparison. The beachfront is still filled with locals exercising and walking. I found it hard to make photos unless the sun was shining and the sunset light was glorious. And that was rare when I was in Brighton.
At first I tried to make normal pics of the beachfront with the colourful beach huts as background. They seem to be the only colour in a dreary winter day. But the more I looked at the Beach Huts the more I zeroed in on the locks. Their metallic shiny surfaces most of the time were a great contrast to the colourful paint that the doors of the hut were painted with. The locks and the paint were a great contrast. Even more so when the locks were rusty from the salty air or the paint on the hut was peeling from neglect. Photographing the locks became a metaphor for lockdown for me. I have always liked doing Photo Typolgogies, a photographic record of similar types. You photograph the same thing over and over to create order and uniformity but at the same time reflect on the differences.
There are 459 Beach Huts that line the seafront in Hove along a str
© Guardian / eyevine. All Rights Reserved. -
DUKAS_122410735_EYE
Locked down in Brighton ñ in pictures. Photographer Antonio Olmos takes his daily exercise along the 3km beachfront in Brighton and Hove documenting 423 of the beach huts.
Brighton Beach Hut Locks. There are 459 Beach Huts in Brighton & Hove. They are along a stretch of just under 3 kilometers along the seafront from Hove Lawns to Hove Lagoon. The photographs refelct the various shades of colour painted on the doors. They also show the weathered look of the door paint of some of the huts. The locks vary from new locks to rusted locks that have been rusted by the salty sea air of the Brighton seafront. ÖÖ.The Text by the Photographer ìI have had to spend a lot of time in Brighton for personal reasons since November, travelling back and forth from London. In the times I have been in Brighton I have been on the lookout for Lockdown photographs. It has meant that I was attracted to the beach looking for something that illustrated lockdown. Brighton is much quieter. Even in winter it can be packed with visitors. But in this latest lockdown it has been eerily quiet in comparison. The beachfront is still filled with locals exercising and walking. I found it hard to make photos unless the sun was shining and the sunset light was glorious. And that was rare when I was in Brighton.
At first I tried to make normal pics of the beachfront with the colourful beach huts as background. They seem to be the only colour in a dreary winter day. But the more I looked at the Beach Huts the more I zeroed in on the locks. Their metallic shiny surfaces most of the time were a great contrast to the colourful paint that the doors of the hut were painted with. The locks and the paint were a great contrast. Even more so when the locks were rusty from the salty air or the paint on the hut was peeling from neglect. Photographing the locks became a metaphor for lockdown for me. I have always liked doing Photo Typolgogies, a photographic record of similar types. You photograph the same thing over and over to create order and uniformity but at the same time reflect on the differences.
There are 459 Beach Huts that line the seafront in Hove along a str
© Guardian / eyevine. All Rights Reserved. -
DUKAS_122410704_EYE
Locked down in Brighton ñ in pictures. Photographer Antonio Olmos takes his daily exercise along the 3km beachfront in Brighton and Hove documenting 423 of the beach huts.
Brighton Beach Hut Locks. There are 459 Beach Huts in Brighton & Hove. They are along a stretch of just under 3 kilometers along the seafront from Hove Lawns to Hove Lagoon. The photographs refelct the various shades of colour painted on the doors. They also show the weathered look of the door paint of some of the huts. The locks vary from new locks to rusted locks that have been rusted by the salty sea air of the Brighton seafront. ÖÖ.The Text by the Photographer ìI have had to spend a lot of time in Brighton for personal reasons since November, travelling back and forth from London. In the times I have been in Brighton I have been on the lookout for Lockdown photographs. It has meant that I was attracted to the beach looking for something that illustrated lockdown. Brighton is much quieter. Even in winter it can be packed with visitors. But in this latest lockdown it has been eerily quiet in comparison. The beachfront is still filled with locals exercising and walking. I found it hard to make photos unless the sun was shining and the sunset light was glorious. And that was rare when I was in Brighton.
At first I tried to make normal pics of the beachfront with the colourful beach huts as background. They seem to be the only colour in a dreary winter day. But the more I looked at the Beach Huts the more I zeroed in on the locks. Their metallic shiny surfaces most of the time were a great contrast to the colourful paint that the doors of the hut were painted with. The locks and the paint were a great contrast. Even more so when the locks were rusty from the salty air or the paint on the hut was peeling from neglect. Photographing the locks became a metaphor for lockdown for me. I have always liked doing Photo Typolgogies, a photographic record of similar types. You photograph the same thing over and over to create order and uniformity but at the same time reflect on the differences.
There are 459 Beach Huts that line the seafront in Hove along a str
© Guardian / eyevine. All Rights Reserved. -
DUKAS_122410652_EYE
Locked down in Brighton ñ in pictures. Photographer Antonio Olmos takes his daily exercise along the 3km beachfront in Brighton and Hove documenting 423 of the beach huts.
Brighton Beach Hut Locks. There are 459 Beach Huts in Brighton & Hove. They are along a stretch of just under 3 kilometers along the seafront from Hove Lawns to Hove Lagoon. The photographs refelct the various shades of colour painted on the doors. They also show the weathered look of the door paint of some of the huts. The locks vary from new locks to rusted locks that have been rusted by the salty sea air of the Brighton seafront. ÖÖ.The Text by the Photographer ìI have had to spend a lot of time in Brighton for personal reasons since November, travelling back and forth from London. In the times I have been in Brighton I have been on the lookout for Lockdown photographs. It has meant that I was attracted to the beach looking for something that illustrated lockdown. Brighton is much quieter. Even in winter it can be packed with visitors. But in this latest lockdown it has been eerily quiet in comparison. The beachfront is still filled with locals exercising and walking. I found it hard to make photos unless the sun was shining and the sunset light was glorious. And that was rare when I was in Brighton.
At first I tried to make normal pics of the beachfront with the colourful beach huts as background. They seem to be the only colour in a dreary winter day. But the more I looked at the Beach Huts the more I zeroed in on the locks. Their metallic shiny surfaces most of the time were a great contrast to the colourful paint that the doors of the hut were painted with. The locks and the paint were a great contrast. Even more so when the locks were rusty from the salty air or the paint on the hut was peeling from neglect. Photographing the locks became a metaphor for lockdown for me. I have always liked doing Photo Typolgogies, a photographic record of similar types. You photograph the same thing over and over to create order and uniformity but at the same time reflect on the differences.
There are 459 Beach Huts that line the seafront in Hove along a str
© Guardian / eyevine. All Rights Reserved. -
DUKAS_122410521_EYE
Locked down in Brighton ñ in pictures. Photographer Antonio Olmos takes his daily exercise along the 3km beachfront in Brighton and Hove documenting 423 of the beach huts.
Brighton Beach Hut Locks. There are 459 Beach Huts in Brighton & Hove. They are along a stretch of just under 3 kilometers along the seafront from Hove Lawns to Hove Lagoon. The photographs refelct the various shades of colour painted on the doors. They also show the weathered look of the door paint of some of the huts. The locks vary from new locks to rusted locks that have been rusted by the salty sea air of the Brighton seafront. ÖÖ.The Text by the Photographer ìI have had to spend a lot of time in Brighton for personal reasons since November, travelling back and forth from London. In the times I have been in Brighton I have been on the lookout for Lockdown photographs. It has meant that I was attracted to the beach looking for something that illustrated lockdown. Brighton is much quieter. Even in winter it can be packed with visitors. But in this latest lockdown it has been eerily quiet in comparison. The beachfront is still filled with locals exercising and walking. I found it hard to make photos unless the sun was shining and the sunset light was glorious. And that was rare when I was in Brighton.
At first I tried to make normal pics of the beachfront with the colourful beach huts as background. They seem to be the only colour in a dreary winter day. But the more I looked at the Beach Huts the more I zeroed in on the locks. Their metallic shiny surfaces most of the time were a great contrast to the colourful paint that the doors of the hut were painted with. The locks and the paint were a great contrast. Even more so when the locks were rusty from the salty air or the paint on the hut was peeling from neglect. Photographing the locks became a metaphor for lockdown for me. I have always liked doing Photo Typolgogies, a photographic record of similar types. You photograph the same thing over and over to create order and uniformity but at the same time reflect on the differences.
There are 459 Beach Huts that line the seafront in Hove along a str
© Guardian / eyevine. All Rights Reserved. -
DUKAS_122410678_EYE
Locked down in Brighton ñ in pictures. Photographer Antonio Olmos takes his daily exercise along the 3km beachfront in Brighton and Hove documenting 423 of the beach huts.
Brighton Beach Hut Locks. There are 459 Beach Huts in Brighton & Hove. They are along a stretch of just under 3 kilometers along the seafront from Hove Lawns to Hove Lagoon. The photographs refelct the various shades of colour painted on the doors. They also show the weathered look of the door paint of some of the huts. The locks vary from new locks to rusted locks that have been rusted by the salty sea air of the Brighton seafront. ÖÖ.The Text by the Photographer ìI have had to spend a lot of time in Brighton for personal reasons since November, travelling back and forth from London. In the times I have been in Brighton I have been on the lookout for Lockdown photographs. It has meant that I was attracted to the beach looking for something that illustrated lockdown. Brighton is much quieter. Even in winter it can be packed with visitors. But in this latest lockdown it has been eerily quiet in comparison. The beachfront is still filled with locals exercising and walking. I found it hard to make photos unless the sun was shining and the sunset light was glorious. And that was rare when I was in Brighton.
At first I tried to make normal pics of the beachfront with the colourful beach huts as background. They seem to be the only colour in a dreary winter day. But the more I looked at the Beach Huts the more I zeroed in on the locks. Their metallic shiny surfaces most of the time were a great contrast to the colourful paint that the doors of the hut were painted with. The locks and the paint were a great contrast. Even more so when the locks were rusty from the salty air or the paint on the hut was peeling from neglect. Photographing the locks became a metaphor for lockdown for me. I have always liked doing Photo Typolgogies, a photographic record of similar types. You photograph the same thing over and over to create order and uniformity but at the same time reflect on the differences.
There are 459 Beach Huts that line the seafront in Hove along a str
© Guardian / eyevine. All Rights Reserved. -
DUKAS_122410621_EYE
Locked down in Brighton ñ in pictures. Photographer Antonio Olmos takes his daily exercise along the 3km beachfront in Brighton and Hove documenting 423 of the beach huts.
Brighton Beach Hut Locks. There are 459 Beach Huts in Brighton & Hove. They are along a stretch of just under 3 kilometers along the seafront from Hove Lawns to Hove Lagoon. The photographs refelct the various shades of colour painted on the doors. They also show the weathered look of the door paint of some of the huts. The locks vary from new locks to rusted locks that have been rusted by the salty sea air of the Brighton seafront. ÖÖ.The Text by the Photographer ìI have had to spend a lot of time in Brighton for personal reasons since November, travelling back and forth from London. In the times I have been in Brighton I have been on the lookout for Lockdown photographs. It has meant that I was attracted to the beach looking for something that illustrated lockdown. Brighton is much quieter. Even in winter it can be packed with visitors. But in this latest lockdown it has been eerily quiet in comparison. The beachfront is still filled with locals exercising and walking. I found it hard to make photos unless the sun was shining and the sunset light was glorious. And that was rare when I was in Brighton.
At first I tried to make normal pics of the beachfront with the colourful beach huts as background. They seem to be the only colour in a dreary winter day. But the more I looked at the Beach Huts the more I zeroed in on the locks. Their metallic shiny surfaces most of the time were a great contrast to the colourful paint that the doors of the hut were painted with. The locks and the paint were a great contrast. Even more so when the locks were rusty from the salty air or the paint on the hut was peeling from neglect. Photographing the locks became a metaphor for lockdown for me. I have always liked doing Photo Typolgogies, a photographic record of similar types. You photograph the same thing over and over to create order and uniformity but at the same time reflect on the differences.
There are 459 Beach Huts that line the seafront in Hove along a str
© Guardian / eyevine. All Rights Reserved. -
DUKAS_122410619_EYE
Locked down in Brighton ñ in pictures. Photographer Antonio Olmos takes his daily exercise along the 3km beachfront in Brighton and Hove documenting 423 of the beach huts.
Brighton Beach Hut Locks. There are 459 Beach Huts in Brighton & Hove. They are along a stretch of just under 3 kilometers along the seafront from Hove Lawns to Hove Lagoon. The photographs refelct the various shades of colour painted on the doors. They also show the weathered look of the door paint of some of the huts. The locks vary from new locks to rusted locks that have been rusted by the salty sea air of the Brighton seafront. ÖÖ.The Text by the Photographer ìI have had to spend a lot of time in Brighton for personal reasons since November, travelling back and forth from London. In the times I have been in Brighton I have been on the lookout for Lockdown photographs. It has meant that I was attracted to the beach looking for something that illustrated lockdown. Brighton is much quieter. Even in winter it can be packed with visitors. But in this latest lockdown it has been eerily quiet in comparison. The beachfront is still filled with locals exercising and walking. I found it hard to make photos unless the sun was shining and the sunset light was glorious. And that was rare when I was in Brighton.
At first I tried to make normal pics of the beachfront with the colourful beach huts as background. They seem to be the only colour in a dreary winter day. But the more I looked at the Beach Huts the more I zeroed in on the locks. Their metallic shiny surfaces most of the time were a great contrast to the colourful paint that the doors of the hut were painted with. The locks and the paint were a great contrast. Even more so when the locks were rusty from the salty air or the paint on the hut was peeling from neglect. Photographing the locks became a metaphor for lockdown for me. I have always liked doing Photo Typolgogies, a photographic record of similar types. You photograph the same thing over and over to create order and uniformity but at the same time reflect on the differences.
There are 459 Beach Huts that line the seafront in Hove along a str
© Guardian / eyevine. All Rights Reserved. -
DUKAS_122410649_EYE
Locked down in Brighton ñ in pictures. Photographer Antonio Olmos takes his daily exercise along the 3km beachfront in Brighton and Hove documenting 423 of the beach huts.
Brighton Beach Hut Locks. There are 459 Beach Huts in Brighton & Hove. They are along a stretch of just under 3 kilometers along the seafront from Hove Lawns to Hove Lagoon. The photographs refelct the various shades of colour painted on the doors. They also show the weathered look of the door paint of some of the huts. The locks vary from new locks to rusted locks that have been rusted by the salty sea air of the Brighton seafront. ÖÖ.The Text by the Photographer ìI have had to spend a lot of time in Brighton for personal reasons since November, travelling back and forth from London. In the times I have been in Brighton I have been on the lookout for Lockdown photographs. It has meant that I was attracted to the beach looking for something that illustrated lockdown. Brighton is much quieter. Even in winter it can be packed with visitors. But in this latest lockdown it has been eerily quiet in comparison. The beachfront is still filled with locals exercising and walking. I found it hard to make photos unless the sun was shining and the sunset light was glorious. And that was rare when I was in Brighton.
At first I tried to make normal pics of the beachfront with the colourful beach huts as background. They seem to be the only colour in a dreary winter day. But the more I looked at the Beach Huts the more I zeroed in on the locks. Their metallic shiny surfaces most of the time were a great contrast to the colourful paint that the doors of the hut were painted with. The locks and the paint were a great contrast. Even more so when the locks were rusty from the salty air or the paint on the hut was peeling from neglect. Photographing the locks became a metaphor for lockdown for me. I have always liked doing Photo Typolgogies, a photographic record of similar types. You photograph the same thing over and over to create order and uniformity but at the same time reflect on the differences.
There are 459 Beach Huts that line the seafront in Hove along a str
© Guardian / eyevine. All Rights Reserved. -
DUKAS_122410618_EYE
Locked down in Brighton ñ in pictures. Photographer Antonio Olmos takes his daily exercise along the 3km beachfront in Brighton and Hove documenting 423 of the beach huts.
Brighton Beach Hut Locks. There are 459 Beach Huts in Brighton & Hove. They are along a stretch of just under 3 kilometers along the seafront from Hove Lawns to Hove Lagoon. The photographs refelct the various shades of colour painted on the doors. They also show the weathered look of the door paint of some of the huts. The locks vary from new locks to rusted locks that have been rusted by the salty sea air of the Brighton seafront. ÖÖ.The Text by the Photographer ìI have had to spend a lot of time in Brighton for personal reasons since November, travelling back and forth from London. In the times I have been in Brighton I have been on the lookout for Lockdown photographs. It has meant that I was attracted to the beach looking for something that illustrated lockdown. Brighton is much quieter. Even in winter it can be packed with visitors. But in this latest lockdown it has been eerily quiet in comparison. The beachfront is still filled with locals exercising and walking. I found it hard to make photos unless the sun was shining and the sunset light was glorious. And that was rare when I was in Brighton.
At first I tried to make normal pics of the beachfront with the colourful beach huts as background. They seem to be the only colour in a dreary winter day. But the more I looked at the Beach Huts the more I zeroed in on the locks. Their metallic shiny surfaces most of the time were a great contrast to the colourful paint that the doors of the hut were painted with. The locks and the paint were a great contrast. Even more so when the locks were rusty from the salty air or the paint on the hut was peeling from neglect. Photographing the locks became a metaphor for lockdown for me. I have always liked doing Photo Typolgogies, a photographic record of similar types. You photograph the same thing over and over to create order and uniformity but at the same time reflect on the differences.
There are 459 Beach Huts that line the seafront in Hove along a str
© Guardian / eyevine. All Rights Reserved. -
DUKAS_122410498_EYE
Locked down in Brighton ñ in pictures. Photographer Antonio Olmos takes his daily exercise along the 3km beachfront in Brighton and Hove documenting 423 of the beach huts.
Brighton Beach Hut Locks. There are 459 Beach Huts in Brighton & Hove. They are along a stretch of just under 3 kilometers along the seafront from Hove Lawns to Hove Lagoon. The photographs refelct the various shades of colour painted on the doors. They also show the weathered look of the door paint of some of the huts. The locks vary from new locks to rusted locks that have been rusted by the salty sea air of the Brighton seafront. ÖÖ.The Text by the Photographer ìI have had to spend a lot of time in Brighton for personal reasons since November, travelling back and forth from London. In the times I have been in Brighton I have been on the lookout for Lockdown photographs. It has meant that I was attracted to the beach looking for something that illustrated lockdown. Brighton is much quieter. Even in winter it can be packed with visitors. But in this latest lockdown it has been eerily quiet in comparison. The beachfront is still filled with locals exercising and walking. I found it hard to make photos unless the sun was shining and the sunset light was glorious. And that was rare when I was in Brighton.
At first I tried to make normal pics of the beachfront with the colourful beach huts as background. They seem to be the only colour in a dreary winter day. But the more I looked at the Beach Huts the more I zeroed in on the locks. Their metallic shiny surfaces most of the time were a great contrast to the colourful paint that the doors of the hut were painted with. The locks and the paint were a great contrast. Even more so when the locks were rusty from the salty air or the paint on the hut was peeling from neglect. Photographing the locks became a metaphor for lockdown for me. I have always liked doing Photo Typolgogies, a photographic record of similar types. You photograph the same thing over and over to create order and uniformity but at the same time reflect on the differences.
There are 459 Beach Huts that line the seafront in Hove along a str
© Guardian / eyevine. All Rights Reserved. -
DUKAS_122410682_EYE
Locked down in Brighton ñ in pictures. Photographer Antonio Olmos takes his daily exercise along the 3km beachfront in Brighton and Hove documenting 423 of the beach huts.
Brighton Beach Hut Locks. There are 459 Beach Huts in Brighton & Hove. They are along a stretch of just under 3 kilometers along the seafront from Hove Lawns to Hove Lagoon. The photographs refelct the various shades of colour painted on the doors. They also show the weathered look of the door paint of some of the huts. The locks vary from new locks to rusted locks that have been rusted by the salty sea air of the Brighton seafront. ÖÖ.The Text by the Photographer ìI have had to spend a lot of time in Brighton for personal reasons since November, travelling back and forth from London. In the times I have been in Brighton I have been on the lookout for Lockdown photographs. It has meant that I was attracted to the beach looking for something that illustrated lockdown. Brighton is much quieter. Even in winter it can be packed with visitors. But in this latest lockdown it has been eerily quiet in comparison. The beachfront is still filled with locals exercising and walking. I found it hard to make photos unless the sun was shining and the sunset light was glorious. And that was rare when I was in Brighton.
At first I tried to make normal pics of the beachfront with the colourful beach huts as background. They seem to be the only colour in a dreary winter day. But the more I looked at the Beach Huts the more I zeroed in on the locks. Their metallic shiny surfaces most of the time were a great contrast to the colourful paint that the doors of the hut were painted with. The locks and the paint were a great contrast. Even more so when the locks were rusty from the salty air or the paint on the hut was peeling from neglect. Photographing the locks became a metaphor for lockdown for me. I have always liked doing Photo Typolgogies, a photographic record of similar types. You photograph the same thing over and over to create order and uniformity but at the same time reflect on the differences.
There are 459 Beach Huts that line the seafront in Hove along a str
© Guardian / eyevine. All Rights Reserved. -
DUKAS_122410520_EYE
Locked down in Brighton ñ in pictures. Photographer Antonio Olmos takes his daily exercise along the 3km beachfront in Brighton and Hove documenting 423 of the beach huts.
Brighton Beach Hut Locks. There are 459 Beach Huts in Brighton & Hove. They are along a stretch of just under 3 kilometers along the seafront from Hove Lawns to Hove Lagoon. The photographs refelct the various shades of colour painted on the doors. They also show the weathered look of the door paint of some of the huts. The locks vary from new locks to rusted locks that have been rusted by the salty sea air of the Brighton seafront. ÖÖ.The Text by the Photographer ìI have had to spend a lot of time in Brighton for personal reasons since November, travelling back and forth from London. In the times I have been in Brighton I have been on the lookout for Lockdown photographs. It has meant that I was attracted to the beach looking for something that illustrated lockdown. Brighton is much quieter. Even in winter it can be packed with visitors. But in this latest lockdown it has been eerily quiet in comparison. The beachfront is still filled with locals exercising and walking. I found it hard to make photos unless the sun was shining and the sunset light was glorious. And that was rare when I was in Brighton.
At first I tried to make normal pics of the beachfront with the colourful beach huts as background. They seem to be the only colour in a dreary winter day. But the more I looked at the Beach Huts the more I zeroed in on the locks. Their metallic shiny surfaces most of the time were a great contrast to the colourful paint that the doors of the hut were painted with. The locks and the paint were a great contrast. Even more so when the locks were rusty from the salty air or the paint on the hut was peeling from neglect. Photographing the locks became a metaphor for lockdown for me. I have always liked doing Photo Typolgogies, a photographic record of similar types. You photograph the same thing over and over to create order and uniformity but at the same time reflect on the differences.
There are 459 Beach Huts that line the seafront in Hove along a str
© Guardian / eyevine. All Rights Reserved. -
DUKAS_122410590_EYE
Locked down in Brighton ñ in pictures. Photographer Antonio Olmos takes his daily exercise along the 3km beachfront in Brighton and Hove documenting 423 of the beach huts.
Brighton Beach Hut Locks. There are 459 Beach Huts in Brighton & Hove. They are along a stretch of just under 3 kilometers along the seafront from Hove Lawns to Hove Lagoon. The photographs refelct the various shades of colour painted on the doors. They also show the weathered look of the door paint of some of the huts. The locks vary from new locks to rusted locks that have been rusted by the salty sea air of the Brighton seafront. ÖÖ.The Text by the Photographer ìI have had to spend a lot of time in Brighton for personal reasons since November, travelling back and forth from London. In the times I have been in Brighton I have been on the lookout for Lockdown photographs. It has meant that I was attracted to the beach looking for something that illustrated lockdown. Brighton is much quieter. Even in winter it can be packed with visitors. But in this latest lockdown it has been eerily quiet in comparison. The beachfront is still filled with locals exercising and walking. I found it hard to make photos unless the sun was shining and the sunset light was glorious. And that was rare when I was in Brighton.
At first I tried to make normal pics of the beachfront with the colourful beach huts as background. They seem to be the only colour in a dreary winter day. But the more I looked at the Beach Huts the more I zeroed in on the locks. Their metallic shiny surfaces most of the time were a great contrast to the colourful paint that the doors of the hut were painted with. The locks and the paint were a great contrast. Even more so when the locks were rusty from the salty air or the paint on the hut was peeling from neglect. Photographing the locks became a metaphor for lockdown for me. I have always liked doing Photo Typolgogies, a photographic record of similar types. You photograph the same thing over and over to create order and uniformity but at the same time reflect on the differences.
There are 459 Beach Huts that line the seafront in Hove along a str
© Guardian / eyevine. All Rights Reserved. -
DUKAS_122410494_EYE
Locked down in Brighton ñ in pictures. Photographer Antonio Olmos takes his daily exercise along the 3km beachfront in Brighton and Hove documenting 423 of the beach huts.
Brighton Beach Hut Locks. There are 459 Beach Huts in Brighton & Hove. They are along a stretch of just under 3 kilometers along the seafront from Hove Lawns to Hove Lagoon. The photographs refelct the various shades of colour painted on the doors. They also show the weathered look of the door paint of some of the huts. The locks vary from new locks to rusted locks that have been rusted by the salty sea air of the Brighton seafront. ÖÖ.The Text by the Photographer ìI have had to spend a lot of time in Brighton for personal reasons since November, travelling back and forth from London. In the times I have been in Brighton I have been on the lookout for Lockdown photographs. It has meant that I was attracted to the beach looking for something that illustrated lockdown. Brighton is much quieter. Even in winter it can be packed with visitors. But in this latest lockdown it has been eerily quiet in comparison. The beachfront is still filled with locals exercising and walking. I found it hard to make photos unless the sun was shining and the sunset light was glorious. And that was rare when I was in Brighton.
At first I tried to make normal pics of the beachfront with the colourful beach huts as background. They seem to be the only colour in a dreary winter day. But the more I looked at the Beach Huts the more I zeroed in on the locks. Their metallic shiny surfaces most of the time were a great contrast to the colourful paint that the doors of the hut were painted with. The locks and the paint were a great contrast. Even more so when the locks were rusty from the salty air or the paint on the hut was peeling from neglect. Photographing the locks became a metaphor for lockdown for me. I have always liked doing Photo Typolgogies, a photographic record of similar types. You photograph the same thing over and over to create order and uniformity but at the same time reflect on the differences.
There are 459 Beach Huts that line the seafront in Hove along a str
© Guardian / eyevine. All Rights Reserved. -
DUKAS_122410532_EYE
Locked down in Brighton ñ in pictures. Photographer Antonio Olmos takes his daily exercise along the 3km beachfront in Brighton and Hove documenting 423 of the beach huts.
Brighton Beach Hut Locks. There are 459 Beach Huts in Brighton & Hove. They are along a stretch of just under 3 kilometers along the seafront from Hove Lawns to Hove Lagoon. The photographs refelct the various shades of colour painted on the doors. They also show the weathered look of the door paint of some of the huts. The locks vary from new locks to rusted locks that have been rusted by the salty sea air of the Brighton seafront. ÖÖ.The Text by the Photographer ìI have had to spend a lot of time in Brighton for personal reasons since November, travelling back and forth from London. In the times I have been in Brighton I have been on the lookout for Lockdown photographs. It has meant that I was attracted to the beach looking for something that illustrated lockdown. Brighton is much quieter. Even in winter it can be packed with visitors. But in this latest lockdown it has been eerily quiet in comparison. The beachfront is still filled with locals exercising and walking. I found it hard to make photos unless the sun was shining and the sunset light was glorious. And that was rare when I was in Brighton.
At first I tried to make normal pics of the beachfront with the colourful beach huts as background. They seem to be the only colour in a dreary winter day. But the more I looked at the Beach Huts the more I zeroed in on the locks. Their metallic shiny surfaces most of the time were a great contrast to the colourful paint that the doors of the hut were painted with. The locks and the paint were a great contrast. Even more so when the locks were rusty from the salty air or the paint on the hut was peeling from neglect. Photographing the locks became a metaphor for lockdown for me. I have always liked doing Photo Typolgogies, a photographic record of similar types. You photograph the same thing over and over to create order and uniformity but at the same time reflect on the differences.
There are 459 Beach Huts that line the seafront in Hove along a str
© Guardian / eyevine. All Rights Reserved. -
DUKAS_122410731_EYE
Locked down in Brighton ñ in pictures. Photographer Antonio Olmos takes his daily exercise along the 3km beachfront in Brighton and Hove documenting 423 of the beach huts.
Brighton Beach Hut Locks. There are 459 Beach Huts in Brighton & Hove. They are along a stretch of just under 3 kilometers along the seafront from Hove Lawns to Hove Lagoon. The photographs refelct the various shades of colour painted on the doors. They also show the weathered look of the door paint of some of the huts. The locks vary from new locks to rusted locks that have been rusted by the salty sea air of the Brighton seafront. ÖÖ.The Text by the Photographer ìI have had to spend a lot of time in Brighton for personal reasons since November, travelling back and forth from London. In the times I have been in Brighton I have been on the lookout for Lockdown photographs. It has meant that I was attracted to the beach looking for something that illustrated lockdown. Brighton is much quieter. Even in winter it can be packed with visitors. But in this latest lockdown it has been eerily quiet in comparison. The beachfront is still filled with locals exercising and walking. I found it hard to make photos unless the sun was shining and the sunset light was glorious. And that was rare when I was in Brighton.
At first I tried to make normal pics of the beachfront with the colourful beach huts as background. They seem to be the only colour in a dreary winter day. But the more I looked at the Beach Huts the more I zeroed in on the locks. Their metallic shiny surfaces most of the time were a great contrast to the colourful paint that the doors of the hut were painted with. The locks and the paint were a great contrast. Even more so when the locks were rusty from the salty air or the paint on the hut was peeling from neglect. Photographing the locks became a metaphor for lockdown for me. I have always liked doing Photo Typolgogies, a photographic record of similar types. You photograph the same thing over and over to create order and uniformity but at the same time reflect on the differences.
There are 459 Beach Huts that line the seafront in Hove along a str
© Guardian / eyevine. All Rights Reserved. -
DUKAS_122410728_EYE
Locked down in Brighton ñ in pictures. Photographer Antonio Olmos takes his daily exercise along the 3km beachfront in Brighton and Hove documenting 423 of the beach huts.
Brighton Beach Hut Locks. There are 459 Beach Huts in Brighton & Hove. They are along a stretch of just under 3 kilometers along the seafront from Hove Lawns to Hove Lagoon. The photographs refelct the various shades of colour painted on the doors. They also show the weathered look of the door paint of some of the huts. The locks vary from new locks to rusted locks that have been rusted by the salty sea air of the Brighton seafront. ÖÖ.The Text by the Photographer ìI have had to spend a lot of time in Brighton for personal reasons since November, travelling back and forth from London. In the times I have been in Brighton I have been on the lookout for Lockdown photographs. It has meant that I was attracted to the beach looking for something that illustrated lockdown. Brighton is much quieter. Even in winter it can be packed with visitors. But in this latest lockdown it has been eerily quiet in comparison. The beachfront is still filled with locals exercising and walking. I found it hard to make photos unless the sun was shining and the sunset light was glorious. And that was rare when I was in Brighton.
At first I tried to make normal pics of the beachfront with the colourful beach huts as background. They seem to be the only colour in a dreary winter day. But the more I looked at the Beach Huts the more I zeroed in on the locks. Their metallic shiny surfaces most of the time were a great contrast to the colourful paint that the doors of the hut were painted with. The locks and the paint were a great contrast. Even more so when the locks were rusty from the salty air or the paint on the hut was peeling from neglect. Photographing the locks became a metaphor for lockdown for me. I have always liked doing Photo Typolgogies, a photographic record of similar types. You photograph the same thing over and over to create order and uniformity but at the same time reflect on the differences.
There are 459 Beach Huts that line the seafront in Hove along a str
© Guardian / eyevine. All Rights Reserved. -
DUKAS_122410589_EYE
Locked down in Brighton ñ in pictures. Photographer Antonio Olmos takes his daily exercise along the 3km beachfront in Brighton and Hove documenting 423 of the beach huts.
Brighton Beach Hut Locks. There are 459 Beach Huts in Brighton & Hove. They are along a stretch of just under 3 kilometers along the seafront from Hove Lawns to Hove Lagoon. The photographs refelct the various shades of colour painted on the doors. They also show the weathered look of the door paint of some of the huts. The locks vary from new locks to rusted locks that have been rusted by the salty sea air of the Brighton seafront. ÖÖ.The Text by the Photographer ìI have had to spend a lot of time in Brighton for personal reasons since November, travelling back and forth from London. In the times I have been in Brighton I have been on the lookout for Lockdown photographs. It has meant that I was attracted to the beach looking for something that illustrated lockdown. Brighton is much quieter. Even in winter it can be packed with visitors. But in this latest lockdown it has been eerily quiet in comparison. The beachfront is still filled with locals exercising and walking. I found it hard to make photos unless the sun was shining and the sunset light was glorious. And that was rare when I was in Brighton.
At first I tried to make normal pics of the beachfront with the colourful beach huts as background. They seem to be the only colour in a dreary winter day. But the more I looked at the Beach Huts the more I zeroed in on the locks. Their metallic shiny surfaces most of the time were a great contrast to the colourful paint that the doors of the hut were painted with. The locks and the paint were a great contrast. Even more so when the locks were rusty from the salty air or the paint on the hut was peeling from neglect. Photographing the locks became a metaphor for lockdown for me. I have always liked doing Photo Typolgogies, a photographic record of similar types. You photograph the same thing over and over to create order and uniformity but at the same time reflect on the differences.
There are 459 Beach Huts that line the seafront in Hove along a str
© Guardian / eyevine. All Rights Reserved. -
DUKAS_122410551_EYE
Locked down in Brighton ñ in pictures. Photographer Antonio Olmos takes his daily exercise along the 3km beachfront in Brighton and Hove documenting 423 of the beach huts.
Brighton Beach Hut Locks. There are 459 Beach Huts in Brighton & Hove. They are along a stretch of just under 3 kilometers along the seafront from Hove Lawns to Hove Lagoon. The photographs refelct the various shades of colour painted on the doors. They also show the weathered look of the door paint of some of the huts. The locks vary from new locks to rusted locks that have been rusted by the salty sea air of the Brighton seafront. ÖÖ.The Text by the Photographer ìI have had to spend a lot of time in Brighton for personal reasons since November, travelling back and forth from London. In the times I have been in Brighton I have been on the lookout for Lockdown photographs. It has meant that I was attracted to the beach looking for something that illustrated lockdown. Brighton is much quieter. Even in winter it can be packed with visitors. But in this latest lockdown it has been eerily quiet in comparison. The beachfront is still filled with locals exercising and walking. I found it hard to make photos unless the sun was shining and the sunset light was glorious. And that was rare when I was in Brighton.
At first I tried to make normal pics of the beachfront with the colourful beach huts as background. They seem to be the only colour in a dreary winter day. But the more I looked at the Beach Huts the more I zeroed in on the locks. Their metallic shiny surfaces most of the time were a great contrast to the colourful paint that the doors of the hut were painted with. The locks and the paint were a great contrast. Even more so when the locks were rusty from the salty air or the paint on the hut was peeling from neglect. Photographing the locks became a metaphor for lockdown for me. I have always liked doing Photo Typolgogies, a photographic record of similar types. You photograph the same thing over and over to create order and uniformity but at the same time reflect on the differences.
There are 459 Beach Huts that line the seafront in Hove along a str
© Guardian / eyevine. All Rights Reserved. -
DUKAS_122410700_EYE
Locked down in Brighton ñ in pictures. Photographer Antonio Olmos takes his daily exercise along the 3km beachfront in Brighton and Hove documenting 423 of the beach huts.
Brighton Beach Hut Locks. There are 459 Beach Huts in Brighton & Hove. They are along a stretch of just under 3 kilometers along the seafront from Hove Lawns to Hove Lagoon. The photographs refelct the various shades of colour painted on the doors. They also show the weathered look of the door paint of some of the huts. The locks vary from new locks to rusted locks that have been rusted by the salty sea air of the Brighton seafront. ÖÖ.The Text by the Photographer ìI have had to spend a lot of time in Brighton for personal reasons since November, travelling back and forth from London. In the times I have been in Brighton I have been on the lookout for Lockdown photographs. It has meant that I was attracted to the beach looking for something that illustrated lockdown. Brighton is much quieter. Even in winter it can be packed with visitors. But in this latest lockdown it has been eerily quiet in comparison. The beachfront is still filled with locals exercising and walking. I found it hard to make photos unless the sun was shining and the sunset light was glorious. And that was rare when I was in Brighton.
At first I tried to make normal pics of the beachfront with the colourful beach huts as background. They seem to be the only colour in a dreary winter day. But the more I looked at the Beach Huts the more I zeroed in on the locks. Their metallic shiny surfaces most of the time were a great contrast to the colourful paint that the doors of the hut were painted with. The locks and the paint were a great contrast. Even more so when the locks were rusty from the salty air or the paint on the hut was peeling from neglect. Photographing the locks became a metaphor for lockdown for me. I have always liked doing Photo Typolgogies, a photographic record of similar types. You photograph the same thing over and over to create order and uniformity but at the same time reflect on the differences.
There are 459 Beach Huts that line the seafront in Hove along a str
© Guardian / eyevine. All Rights Reserved. -
DUKAS_122410624_EYE
Locked down in Brighton ñ in pictures. Photographer Antonio Olmos takes his daily exercise along the 3km beachfront in Brighton and Hove documenting 423 of the beach huts.
Brighton Beach Hut Locks. There are 459 Beach Huts in Brighton & Hove. They are along a stretch of just under 3 kilometers along the seafront from Hove Lawns to Hove Lagoon. The photographs refelct the various shades of colour painted on the doors. They also show the weathered look of the door paint of some of the huts. The locks vary from new locks to rusted locks that have been rusted by the salty sea air of the Brighton seafront. ÖÖ.The Text by the Photographer ìI have had to spend a lot of time in Brighton for personal reasons since November, travelling back and forth from London. In the times I have been in Brighton I have been on the lookout for Lockdown photographs. It has meant that I was attracted to the beach looking for something that illustrated lockdown. Brighton is much quieter. Even in winter it can be packed with visitors. But in this latest lockdown it has been eerily quiet in comparison. The beachfront is still filled with locals exercising and walking. I found it hard to make photos unless the sun was shining and the sunset light was glorious. And that was rare when I was in Brighton.
At first I tried to make normal pics of the beachfront with the colourful beach huts as background. They seem to be the only colour in a dreary winter day. But the more I looked at the Beach Huts the more I zeroed in on the locks. Their metallic shiny surfaces most of the time were a great contrast to the colourful paint that the doors of the hut were painted with. The locks and the paint were a great contrast. Even more so when the locks were rusty from the salty air or the paint on the hut was peeling from neglect. Photographing the locks became a metaphor for lockdown for me. I have always liked doing Photo Typolgogies, a photographic record of similar types. You photograph the same thing over and over to create order and uniformity but at the same time reflect on the differences.
There are 459 Beach Huts that line the seafront in Hove along a str
© Guardian / eyevine. All Rights Reserved. -
DUKAS_122410657_EYE
Locked down in Brighton ñ in pictures. Photographer Antonio Olmos takes his daily exercise along the 3km beachfront in Brighton and Hove documenting 423 of the beach huts.
Brighton Beach Hut Locks. There are 459 Beach Huts in Brighton & Hove. They are along a stretch of just under 3 kilometers along the seafront from Hove Lawns to Hove Lagoon. The photographs refelct the various shades of colour painted on the doors. They also show the weathered look of the door paint of some of the huts. The locks vary from new locks to rusted locks that have been rusted by the salty sea air of the Brighton seafront. ÖÖ.The Text by the Photographer ìI have had to spend a lot of time in Brighton for personal reasons since November, travelling back and forth from London. In the times I have been in Brighton I have been on the lookout for Lockdown photographs. It has meant that I was attracted to the beach looking for something that illustrated lockdown. Brighton is much quieter. Even in winter it can be packed with visitors. But in this latest lockdown it has been eerily quiet in comparison. The beachfront is still filled with locals exercising and walking. I found it hard to make photos unless the sun was shining and the sunset light was glorious. And that was rare when I was in Brighton.
At first I tried to make normal pics of the beachfront with the colourful beach huts as background. They seem to be the only colour in a dreary winter day. But the more I looked at the Beach Huts the more I zeroed in on the locks. Their metallic shiny surfaces most of the time were a great contrast to the colourful paint that the doors of the hut were painted with. The locks and the paint were a great contrast. Even more so when the locks were rusty from the salty air or the paint on the hut was peeling from neglect. Photographing the locks became a metaphor for lockdown for me. I have always liked doing Photo Typolgogies, a photographic record of similar types. You photograph the same thing over and over to create order and uniformity but at the same time reflect on the differences.
There are 459 Beach Huts that line the seafront in Hove along a str
© Guardian / eyevine. All Rights Reserved. -
DUKAS_122410683_EYE
Locked down in Brighton ñ in pictures. Photographer Antonio Olmos takes his daily exercise along the 3km beachfront in Brighton and Hove documenting 423 of the beach huts.
Brighton Beach Hut Locks. There are 459 Beach Huts in Brighton & Hove. They are along a stretch of just under 3 kilometers along the seafront from Hove Lawns to Hove Lagoon. The photographs refelct the various shades of colour painted on the doors. They also show the weathered look of the door paint of some of the huts. The locks vary from new locks to rusted locks that have been rusted by the salty sea air of the Brighton seafront. ÖÖ.The Text by the Photographer ìI have had to spend a lot of time in Brighton for personal reasons since November, travelling back and forth from London. In the times I have been in Brighton I have been on the lookout for Lockdown photographs. It has meant that I was attracted to the beach looking for something that illustrated lockdown. Brighton is much quieter. Even in winter it can be packed with visitors. But in this latest lockdown it has been eerily quiet in comparison. The beachfront is still filled with locals exercising and walking. I found it hard to make photos unless the sun was shining and the sunset light was glorious. And that was rare when I was in Brighton.
At first I tried to make normal pics of the beachfront with the colourful beach huts as background. They seem to be the only colour in a dreary winter day. But the more I looked at the Beach Huts the more I zeroed in on the locks. Their metallic shiny surfaces most of the time were a great contrast to the colourful paint that the doors of the hut were painted with. The locks and the paint were a great contrast. Even more so when the locks were rusty from the salty air or the paint on the hut was peeling from neglect. Photographing the locks became a metaphor for lockdown for me. I have always liked doing Photo Typolgogies, a photographic record of similar types. You photograph the same thing over and over to create order and uniformity but at the same time reflect on the differences.
There are 459 Beach Huts that line the seafront in Hove along a str
© Guardian / eyevine. All Rights Reserved. -
DUKAS_122410733_EYE
Locked down in Brighton ñ in pictures. Photographer Antonio Olmos takes his daily exercise along the 3km beachfront in Brighton and Hove documenting 423 of the beach huts.
Brighton Beach Hut Locks. There are 459 Beach Huts in Brighton & Hove. They are along a stretch of just under 3 kilometers along the seafront from Hove Lawns to Hove Lagoon. The photographs refelct the various shades of colour painted on the doors. They also show the weathered look of the door paint of some of the huts. The locks vary from new locks to rusted locks that have been rusted by the salty sea air of the Brighton seafront. ÖÖ.The Text by the Photographer ìI have had to spend a lot of time in Brighton for personal reasons since November, travelling back and forth from London. In the times I have been in Brighton I have been on the lookout for Lockdown photographs. It has meant that I was attracted to the beach looking for something that illustrated lockdown. Brighton is much quieter. Even in winter it can be packed with visitors. But in this latest lockdown it has been eerily quiet in comparison. The beachfront is still filled with locals exercising and walking. I found it hard to make photos unless the sun was shining and the sunset light was glorious. And that was rare when I was in Brighton.
At first I tried to make normal pics of the beachfront with the colourful beach huts as background. They seem to be the only colour in a dreary winter day. But the more I looked at the Beach Huts the more I zeroed in on the locks. Their metallic shiny surfaces most of the time were a great contrast to the colourful paint that the doors of the hut were painted with. The locks and the paint were a great contrast. Even more so when the locks were rusty from the salty air or the paint on the hut was peeling from neglect. Photographing the locks became a metaphor for lockdown for me. I have always liked doing Photo Typolgogies, a photographic record of similar types. You photograph the same thing over and over to create order and uniformity but at the same time reflect on the differences.
There are 459 Beach Huts that line the seafront in Hove along a str
© Guardian / eyevine. All Rights Reserved. -
DUKAS_122410656_EYE
Locked down in Brighton ñ in pictures. Photographer Antonio Olmos takes his daily exercise along the 3km beachfront in Brighton and Hove documenting 423 of the beach huts.
Brighton Beach Hut Locks. There are 459 Beach Huts in Brighton & Hove. They are along a stretch of just under 3 kilometers along the seafront from Hove Lawns to Hove Lagoon. The photographs refelct the various shades of colour painted on the doors. They also show the weathered look of the door paint of some of the huts. The locks vary from new locks to rusted locks that have been rusted by the salty sea air of the Brighton seafront. ÖÖ.The Text by the Photographer ìI have had to spend a lot of time in Brighton for personal reasons since November, travelling back and forth from London. In the times I have been in Brighton I have been on the lookout for Lockdown photographs. It has meant that I was attracted to the beach looking for something that illustrated lockdown. Brighton is much quieter. Even in winter it can be packed with visitors. But in this latest lockdown it has been eerily quiet in comparison. The beachfront is still filled with locals exercising and walking. I found it hard to make photos unless the sun was shining and the sunset light was glorious. And that was rare when I was in Brighton.
At first I tried to make normal pics of the beachfront with the colourful beach huts as background. They seem to be the only colour in a dreary winter day. But the more I looked at the Beach Huts the more I zeroed in on the locks. Their metallic shiny surfaces most of the time were a great contrast to the colourful paint that the doors of the hut were painted with. The locks and the paint were a great contrast. Even more so when the locks were rusty from the salty air or the paint on the hut was peeling from neglect. Photographing the locks became a metaphor for lockdown for me. I have always liked doing Photo Typolgogies, a photographic record of similar types. You photograph the same thing over and over to create order and uniformity but at the same time reflect on the differences.
There are 459 Beach Huts that line the seafront in Hove along a str
© Guardian / eyevine. All Rights Reserved. -
DUKAS_122410501_EYE
Locked down in Brighton ñ in pictures. Photographer Antonio Olmos takes his daily exercise along the 3km beachfront in Brighton and Hove documenting 423 of the beach huts.
Brighton Beach Hut Locks. There are 459 Beach Huts in Brighton & Hove. They are along a stretch of just under 3 kilometers along the seafront from Hove Lawns to Hove Lagoon. The photographs refelct the various shades of colour painted on the doors. They also show the weathered look of the door paint of some of the huts. The locks vary from new locks to rusted locks that have been rusted by the salty sea air of the Brighton seafront. ÖÖ.The Text by the Photographer ìI have had to spend a lot of time in Brighton for personal reasons since November, travelling back and forth from London. In the times I have been in Brighton I have been on the lookout for Lockdown photographs. It has meant that I was attracted to the beach looking for something that illustrated lockdown. Brighton is much quieter. Even in winter it can be packed with visitors. But in this latest lockdown it has been eerily quiet in comparison. The beachfront is still filled with locals exercising and walking. I found it hard to make photos unless the sun was shining and the sunset light was glorious. And that was rare when I was in Brighton.
At first I tried to make normal pics of the beachfront with the colourful beach huts as background. They seem to be the only colour in a dreary winter day. But the more I looked at the Beach Huts the more I zeroed in on the locks. Their metallic shiny surfaces most of the time were a great contrast to the colourful paint that the doors of the hut were painted with. The locks and the paint were a great contrast. Even more so when the locks were rusty from the salty air or the paint on the hut was peeling from neglect. Photographing the locks became a metaphor for lockdown for me. I have always liked doing Photo Typolgogies, a photographic record of similar types. You photograph the same thing over and over to create order and uniformity but at the same time reflect on the differences.
There are 459 Beach Huts that line the seafront in Hove along a str
© Guardian / eyevine. All Rights Reserved. -
DUKAS_122410705_EYE
Locked down in Brighton ñ in pictures. Photographer Antonio Olmos takes his daily exercise along the 3km beachfront in Brighton and Hove documenting 423 of the beach huts.
Brighton Beach Hut Locks. There are 459 Beach Huts in Brighton & Hove. They are along a stretch of just under 3 kilometers along the seafront from Hove Lawns to Hove Lagoon. The photographs refelct the various shades of colour painted on the doors. They also show the weathered look of the door paint of some of the huts. The locks vary from new locks to rusted locks that have been rusted by the salty sea air of the Brighton seafront. ÖÖ.The Text by the Photographer ìI have had to spend a lot of time in Brighton for personal reasons since November, travelling back and forth from London. In the times I have been in Brighton I have been on the lookout for Lockdown photographs. It has meant that I was attracted to the beach looking for something that illustrated lockdown. Brighton is much quieter. Even in winter it can be packed with visitors. But in this latest lockdown it has been eerily quiet in comparison. The beachfront is still filled with locals exercising and walking. I found it hard to make photos unless the sun was shining and the sunset light was glorious. And that was rare when I was in Brighton.
At first I tried to make normal pics of the beachfront with the colourful beach huts as background. They seem to be the only colour in a dreary winter day. But the more I looked at the Beach Huts the more I zeroed in on the locks. Their metallic shiny surfaces most of the time were a great contrast to the colourful paint that the doors of the hut were painted with. The locks and the paint were a great contrast. Even more so when the locks were rusty from the salty air or the paint on the hut was peeling from neglect. Photographing the locks became a metaphor for lockdown for me. I have always liked doing Photo Typolgogies, a photographic record of similar types. You photograph the same thing over and over to create order and uniformity but at the same time reflect on the differences.
There are 459 Beach Huts that line the seafront in Hove along a str
© Guardian / eyevine. All Rights Reserved. -
DUKAS_122410734_EYE
Locked down in Brighton ñ in pictures. Photographer Antonio Olmos takes his daily exercise along the 3km beachfront in Brighton and Hove documenting 423 of the beach huts.
Brighton Beach Hut Locks. There are 459 Beach Huts in Brighton & Hove. They are along a stretch of just under 3 kilometers along the seafront from Hove Lawns to Hove Lagoon. The photographs refelct the various shades of colour painted on the doors. They also show the weathered look of the door paint of some of the huts. The locks vary from new locks to rusted locks that have been rusted by the salty sea air of the Brighton seafront. ÖÖ.The Text by the Photographer ìI have had to spend a lot of time in Brighton for personal reasons since November, travelling back and forth from London. In the times I have been in Brighton I have been on the lookout for Lockdown photographs. It has meant that I was attracted to the beach looking for something that illustrated lockdown. Brighton is much quieter. Even in winter it can be packed with visitors. But in this latest lockdown it has been eerily quiet in comparison. The beachfront is still filled with locals exercising and walking. I found it hard to make photos unless the sun was shining and the sunset light was glorious. And that was rare when I was in Brighton.
At first I tried to make normal pics of the beachfront with the colourful beach huts as background. They seem to be the only colour in a dreary winter day. But the more I looked at the Beach Huts the more I zeroed in on the locks. Their metallic shiny surfaces most of the time were a great contrast to the colourful paint that the doors of the hut were painted with. The locks and the paint were a great contrast. Even more so when the locks were rusty from the salty air or the paint on the hut was peeling from neglect. Photographing the locks became a metaphor for lockdown for me. I have always liked doing Photo Typolgogies, a photographic record of similar types. You photograph the same thing over and over to create order and uniformity but at the same time reflect on the differences.
There are 459 Beach Huts that line the seafront in Hove along a str
© Guardian / eyevine. All Rights Reserved.