
I had a lovely experience last week.
A couple of friends run a creative space where they teach art to students of all ages, from kids, to teenagers and adults. They asked me to take a few photos during their workshops, so from Monday to Friday I was visiting them for an hour each day, capturing images of different groups working on different forms of art.
Painting sessions for adults, freehand sketching and drawing for teens preparing for fine arts or architecture school, as well as clay and painting workshops for children, filled my afternoons with colours, images, and laughter (especially during the children's hour), bringing a refreshing change to my daily routine.



Photography-wise, it was simple and spontaneous, no special setup, no planning around the best light of the day. Some afternoons the sunlight poured generously through the windows, on others, I had to make the most of the ceiling lamps. But in every case, I think the result turned out quite nice, and the atmosphere of each class came through beautifully.
What I enjoyed most, though, was watching people create.
Seeing adults lose themselves in colour, teenagers concentrating on precise lines, and children shaping little worlds out of clay, reminded me that creativity has no age.



There was something deeply calming in the rhythm of those moments. Brushes moving, pencils sketching, hands covered in clay. Time seemed to slow down inside that space. No phones, no rush, no noise, just focus. Each person was in their own small world, yet all those worlds coexisted quietly in the same room.
The adults leaned closer to their canvases, the teenagers measured lines and angles with care, and the children, well, the children were of course the noisy exception, chatting, laughing, and shaping clay figures with endless enthusiasm.



I found myself smiling behind the camera more than once. There’s a special kind of peace in watching others create. You start noticing the pauses between movements, the way someone tilts their head before adding a new colour, or how they hold their breath while shaping a detail. It’s like observing thought take a physical form.



Maybe that’s what I liked most about the whole experience. Being surrounded by focus, curiosity, and the simple joy of making something with your hands. In a world that often moves too fast, moments like these feel like small reminders to slow down, to look closer, to make space for process, and to find joy in the act itself rather than the result.



All the pictures and the words are mine.
Thank you for reading and if you want to know more about me you can check out my introduction post.
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