Flowers of Tomorrow
“Flowers of Tomorrow” was born from a simple, instinctive experiment: placing flower seeds directly onto photographic paper and letting the light pass through them inside a pinhole camera.The result is a fragile and unpredictable imprint — a dialogue between what does not yet exist, the future flower, and the raw material of the present. In this series, photography becomes a kind of soil, a place where the seeds do not truly grow, but leave a trace, a hint of their possible presence.The paper records not an image of reality, but the promise of something that could emerge. Each piece is a collaboration between myself, the light, and those small fragments of potential life: a slow process made of waiting, mistakes, and surprises.A reminder that photography is not only about capturing what I see, but also about giving space to what is not there yet.