04/06/2026
Atlanta, 2026.
Yesterday I spent the day at 404 Day at Underground Atlanta.
I got down there early because it had been a while since I’d really been able to get out and document the city the way I wanted to.
The city was just waking up.
There was a 5K moving through downtown before the 404 Day parade and everything else began.
I did a few laps through downtown getting my reps in before everything started. Ran into a few photographer homies I hadn’t seen in a minute.
We talked about projects. About what we’re working on. About trying to stay disciplined and keep making work even when life gets in the way. We talked about the new Gordon Parks color photography exhibition at Jackson Fine Art and how good it feels when you see work that reminds you why you started.
Before the crowds.
Before the parade.
Before the 404 Day festivities really took off.
Around 10am my Mamiya 7 stopped working.
Completely threw me off.
For a second I stood there frustrated.
But I’ve been trying to teach myself that when something goes wrong, stressing about it doesn’t move you any closer to the solution.
You can spend all day being mad that something broke.
Or you can ask yourself: what’s the next move?
The city was still there.
And I had options.
I could go home frustrated and let one broken camera decide what kind of day it was.
Or I could remind myself that documenting this city has never been about one camera, one lens, or one perfect plan.
The work was still there waiting on me.
Atlanta was still outside.
The people were still outside.
The moments I came for were still happening whether I was ready or not.
All I had to do was find another way to meet them.
So I grabbed an Uber, went home, picked up my 35mm camera, and came right back to Underground Atlanta.
Because documenting this city has never really been about the camera.
It’s about mindset.
About staying open.
About finding another way when the first way stops working.