A Different Shade of Place
In Greece, the streets turn into a palette. Houses are washed in ochre, turquoise, and faded pink; shutters stand bright against whitewashed walls; balconies lean into the sky. Each building carries its own character, marked by colour and weather, by light and time.
I photographed these facades because they stand apart from the brick monotony of home, the rows of houses that repeat themselves until they blur. Here, nothing feels uniform. Every wall is different, every shade a reminder that place can carry its own rhythm and voice.
A Different Shade of Place is a study of those differences, the way colour reshapes memory, the way architecture can hold both individuality and history, and the way light turns walls into something more than stone.