High Up is a 17-photo gaze from above — a quiet detachment from the rush below. Shot from the heights of Tokyo Skytree, this album captures the city not as chaos, but as rhythm: a sprawl of light, pattern, and movement seen from a place where everything feels slower.
Roads braid through the landscape like veins. Buildings stack in careful disorder. Trains curve through the distance like clockwork. From here, even the noise feels muted — a hum beneath the glass. There are no faces, just shapes. No crowds, just flow.
High Up is about perspective — not just altitude, but atmosphere. It invites stillness. A moment to watch the city breathe, to see its size, its structure, its strange beauty from afar. It’s not escape — it’s observation. Detached, yes. But never disconnected.














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