camouflage
cam·ou·flage
[kam-uh-flahzh]
noun, adjective, verb, -flaged, -flag·ing.
–noun
1 a way of hiding people or objects by making them look like the natural background
2 the colour or shape of an animal that makes it difficult to see because it looks similar to what is around it
3 a way of hiding the truth
These images are about accidents. Nobody in these photographs ever consciously wished to hide from anything but nonetheless that was the result. Finding these photographs is sort of like stumbling through a dream. While along your path and you stop—something gets your attention and you raise your camera to your eye.You don't know exactly what it is but there is definitely something going on but you just can't put your finger on it. Upon editing the images afterward, you see what it was that got your attention in the first place. The blur becomes something more defined.
If the clothing were different or they were standing in front of a different background, these images would be dull and lifeless but chance and circumstance intervened. The dream became something real.