this face will never exist again
The profile beside you was invented the moment you arrived — drawn from this visit's seed in fourteen thousand grains of light. Move through it; it moves aside. Leave, and it is gone forever.
We photograph people the same way: as something that will not happen again.
Why a studio would build this
The face on our homepage is a proof, not a portrait. A few seeded numbers — a brow, a nose, the angle of one light — and something looks back at you that has never existed. That is how cheap a generic likeness is: any arithmetic can make one.
What arithmetic cannot make is the specific person in front of the lens: the asymmetry earned from squinting at forty summers, the mouth about to disagree. That is the only thing we photograph. The machine invents faces; we go and find yours.
An hour, no camera. We learn the face you make when nobody is asking you to make one — then we design one light, for that face alone.
Ninety minutes, one light, real grain — we shoot film because film, like you, does not repeat itself. Twelve frames. No more.
A single print, editioned 1 of 1, and the negative in your hand. We keep nothing. The face returns to its owner.
The studio takes eight sittings a season. The homepage will keep inventing strangers; we would rather meet you.
Book a sitting