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Lee

Mar 31 2017 12 Comments

An old drinker in an old Tokyo bar

This old fella is probably just as fond of drinking in this bar, as I am of photographing it. And as far as decisions go, I’d say we both made pretty decent ones.

an old japanese drinker in an old bar

Categorized: Food and Drink, Photography

Mar 29 2017 8 Comments

A cherry blossom wedding selfie

With the cherry blossom now visible, it would seem this year’s flower-based photo frenzy has well and truly begun.

a cherry blossom wedding selfie

Categorized: Photography

Mar 27 2017 10 Comments

A traditional Tokyo rice cracker shop

Seeing rice crackers made using time-honoured techniques, in suitably traditional settings, is nice to say the least. Better still, however, is the aroma, as despite their simplicity, the resultant snacks smell absolutely sensational.

A traditional Tokyo rice cracker shop

Categorized: Food and Drink, Photography

Mar 24 2017 6 Comments

A shadowy Tokyo smoker

Now no longer the smokers’ paradise it once was, Japan’s cigarette lovers are slowly but surely being ushered into the shadows.

tokyo smoker in the shadows

Categorized: Photography

Mar 22 2017 22 Comments

The sadness of a small, abandoned Japanese house

Hemmed in by a new car park on one side and a ditch on the other, this abandoned house is small and basic to say the least. There’s no bathroom. Not even a toilet. A shared breeze-block outhouse being the only facility. Plus, as far as a kitchen goes, it was presumably a case of making do with a two ring gas table near the door. Yet despite the building’s size and rather primitive nature, until July 2005 its two rooms were clearly very much a home for the old lady who lived there.

the sadness of a small abandoned Japanese house

A tiny, rectangular space as one entered acting as a living room, dining room and pretty much everything except a bedroom.

the sadness of a small abandoned Japanese house

Up some terrifyingly steep and narrow stairs one finds the latter. A room that was so sad and silent that the opening verses of John Betjeman’s Death in Leamington seemed unsettlingly apt:

She died in the upstairs bedroom
By the light of the ev’ning star
That shone through the plate glass window
From over Leamington Spa.

Beside her the lonely crochet
Lay patiently and unstirred,
But the fingers that would have work’d it
Were dead as the spoken word.

the sadness of a small abandoned Japanese house

Categorized: Haikyo

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