This essay has no answers; only questions. Thirty-five frames of Istanbul — and beneath each frame, something the viewfinder cannot help asking.
Is it the tourist taking a selfie in Galata's shadow who sees the city, or the man who has sold simit on the same corner for forty years? The photographer stands outside both, in a third place: on the thin line between seeing and possessing. Is photographing a city owning it — or surrendering to it?
Two hundred people sitting side by side on a ferry are two hundred separate worlds. Istanbul's most photogenic state is exactly this: the geometry of people physically adjacent and mentally apart. What they call street photography is mostly waiting for the moment these solitudes intersect.
Is photographing a city owning it — or surrendering to it?
The postcard one, or the commuter-line one? Both. The city is an organism that changes shape according to the lens you mount — and perhaps the most honest frame is the one where you confess which one you chose. The series below is our confession.


































Black-and-white Istanbul and the question of colour deserved their own essay — that argument lives here.
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