
There’s something hypnotic about Bangkok’s curved roads—the way they guide you deeper into the city’s maze, where motorcyclists lean into turns with practiced ease. This is where the journey begins, in the quiet hours before the city fully awakens.

As twilight settles, I stumbled upon “46 Space”—a café glowing like a beacon in the Bangkok night. String lights dance overhead, casting warm halos on wet pavement. This is Bangkok after dark: intimate, atmospheric, alive with possibility.

From above, Bangkok reveals its split personality. Gleaming skyscrapers pierce the hazy sky while below, old shophouses cling to their existence. This is the Bangkok I love—a city that refuses to choose between past and future, embracing both with equal intensity.

Step inside, and you’ll find another Bangkok entirely. Shopping malls rise like cathedrals, their atriums soaring skyward with installations that blur the line between commerce and art. This too is Bangkok: modern, polished, eternally reinventing itself.

I switched to black and white because some scenes demand to be timeless. Strip away the color, and you’re left with pure energy—the relentless motion, the density, the organized chaos that is Bangkok’s daily rhythm.
Lost in Bangkok’s streets means finding yourself in a thousand tiny moments: a curve in the road, a café at night, a view from above, a chandelier in a mall, a traffic jam on a Tuesday. Each frame is a piece of this sprawling, contradictory, beautiful city—a place where you can be lost and found at the same time.
Camera: FUJIFILM X-T10 Location: Bangkok, Thailand Genre: Street Photography