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          <title><![CDATA[The reflection of the church - On my daily walk between home and work, I pass one of Gothenburg’s most iconic churches. Rather than capturing its famous height, I focused on its reflection in the water to find a new perspective on a familiar sight. Choosing black and white helps strip away distractions, highlighting the quiet mood and the ripples in the surface. In these images, the solid stone of the city becomes fluid and dreamlike. This series is a tribute to the beauty we often overlook in our everyday routines. | Thitipong Sansanayuth]]></title>
          <link>https://www.cizucu.com/en/photos/uwiKstK9T328uSDcyJ8T</link>
          <description><![CDATA[See more of Thitipong Sansanayuth's photography on cizucu.]]></description>
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            <name>Thitipong Sansanayuth</name>
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          <pubDate>Tue, 03 Feb 2026 20:57:57 GMT</pubDate>
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            <media:title><![CDATA[The reflection of the church - On my daily walk between home and work, I pass one of Gothenburg’s most iconic churches. Rather than capturing its famous height, I focused on its reflection in the water to find a new perspective on a familiar sight. Choosing black and white helps strip away distractions, highlighting the quiet mood and the ripples in the surface. In these images, the solid stone of the city becomes fluid and dreamlike. This series is a tribute to the beauty we often overlook in our everyday routines. | Thitipong Sansanayuth]]></media:title>
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          <title><![CDATA[這張是我喜歡的「木漏れ日」，關於這個名詞也是看了<我的完美日常>這部電影之後才漸漸體會其中之含義，去觀察日復一日規律的生活中的那些細微變化，在不完美的人生中找尋完美的日常。 This photo captures what I love—the “komorebi.” It was after watching Perfect Days that I gradually came to understand the meaning behind this word: observing the subtle changes within the routines of everyday life, and finding a sense of perfection within an imperfect life. | Stan]]></title>
          <link>https://www.cizucu.com/en/photos/6g8a0VB4hXrUs6A6Zp5J</link>
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          <pubDate>Mon, 20 Oct 2025 16:43:25 GMT</pubDate>
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            <media:title><![CDATA[這張是我喜歡的「木漏れ日」，關於這個名詞也是看了<我的完美日常>這部電影之後才漸漸體會其中之含義，去觀察日復一日規律的生活中的那些細微變化，在不完美的人生中找尋完美的日常。 This photo captures what I love—the “komorebi.” It was after watching Perfect Days that I gradually came to understand the meaning behind this word: observing the subtle changes within the routines of everyday life, and finding a sense of perfection within an imperfect life. | Stan]]></media:title>
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          <title><![CDATA[Surrounded by dense building blocks and repeated routines in Seoul, I remember the bridge as the only place where the uninterrupted sky could be seen. For me, the car was where our family spent the most time together, talking, while I gazed out of the window at the fast-moving cityscape - thinking, revisiting, and imagining. I also caught glimpses of people in their cars or on the subway crossing the bridge, looking out at the river and the distant scene, wondering where they were going and what concerns they might have.  Many of Seoul’s bridges were built during the decades of rapid growth in the 1960s and 70s, carrying people swiftly across the Han River as the city expanded. Yet while crossing them, I often found an unexpected stillness - a brief sanctuary where, for a moment, one could lose oneself in thought above the moving city. | Moodeeprincess]]></title>
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          <description><![CDATA[See more of Moodeeprincess's photography on cizucu.]]></description>
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          <pubDate>Sun, 05 Apr 2026 06:30:24 GMT</pubDate>
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            <media:title><![CDATA[Surrounded by dense building blocks and repeated routines in Seoul, I remember the bridge as the only place where the uninterrupted sky could be seen. For me, the car was where our family spent the most time together, talking, while I gazed out of the window at the fast-moving cityscape - thinking, revisiting, and imagining. I also caught glimpses of people in their cars or on the subway crossing the bridge, looking out at the river and the distant scene, wondering where they were going and what concerns they might have.  Many of Seoul’s bridges were built during the decades of rapid growth in the 1960s and 70s, carrying people swiftly across the Han River as the city expanded. Yet while crossing them, I often found an unexpected stillness - a brief sanctuary where, for a moment, one could lose oneself in thought above the moving city. | Moodeeprincess]]></media:title>
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          <title><![CDATA[Surrounded by dense building blocks and repeated routines in Seoul, I remember the bridge as the only place where the uninterrupted sky could be seen. For me, the car was where our family spent the most time together, talking, while I gazed out of the window at the fast-moving cityscape - thinking, revisiting, and imagining. I also caught glimpses of people in their cars or on the subway crossing the bridge, looking out at the river and the distant scene, wondering where they were going and what concerns they might have.  Many of Seoul’s bridges were built during the decades of rapid growth in the 1960s and 70s, carrying people swiftly across the Han River as the city expanded. Yet while crossing them, I often found an unexpected stillness, a brief sanctuary where, for a moment, one could lose oneself in thought above the moving city. | Moodeeprincess]]></title>
          <link>https://www.cizucu.com/en/photos/jrUyyDVwvyIJ5TtiMGXS</link>
          <description><![CDATA[See more of Moodeeprincess's photography on cizucu.]]></description>
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            <name>Moodeeprincess</name>
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          <pubDate>Sun, 05 Apr 2026 06:44:38 GMT</pubDate>
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            <media:title><![CDATA[Surrounded by dense building blocks and repeated routines in Seoul, I remember the bridge as the only place where the uninterrupted sky could be seen. For me, the car was where our family spent the most time together, talking, while I gazed out of the window at the fast-moving cityscape - thinking, revisiting, and imagining. I also caught glimpses of people in their cars or on the subway crossing the bridge, looking out at the river and the distant scene, wondering where they were going and what concerns they might have.  Many of Seoul’s bridges were built during the decades of rapid growth in the 1960s and 70s, carrying people swiftly across the Han River as the city expanded. Yet while crossing them, I often found an unexpected stillness, a brief sanctuary where, for a moment, one could lose oneself in thought above the moving city. | Moodeeprincess]]></media:title>
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          <title><![CDATA[Surrounded by dense building blocks and repeated routines in Seoul, I remember the bridge as the only place where the uninterrupted sky could be seen. For me, the car was where our family spent the most time together, talking, while I gazed out of the window at the fast-moving cityscape - thinking, revisiting, and imagining. I also caught glimpses of people in their cars or on the subway crossing the bridge, looking out at the river and the distant scene, wondering where they were going and what concerns they might have.  Many of Seoul’s bridges were built during the decades of rapid growth in the 1960s and 70s, carrying people swiftly across the Han River as the city expanded. Yet while crossing them, I often found an unexpected stillness, a brief sanctuary where, for a moment, one could lose oneself in thought above the moving city. | Moodeeprincess]]></title>
          <link>https://www.cizucu.com/en/photos/d7oBNJGRG3OmKgbsoSBc</link>
          <description><![CDATA[See more of Moodeeprincess's photography on cizucu.]]></description>
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            <name>Moodeeprincess</name>
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          <pubDate>Sun, 05 Apr 2026 06:46:15 GMT</pubDate>
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          <title><![CDATA[Under the fluorescent glow of 7‑Eleven, a quiet kind of democracy unfolds. Here, in the threshold between street and shelter, differences dissolve—if only for a moment. Foreigners in transit, Thai locals on routine, migrant workers from Myanmar on break: they all arrive with the same gestures, the same small transactions, the same pause in motion. The counter becomes a shared horizon, where currencies, languages, and lives briefly align.  In Thailand, 7/11 is more than a convenience store—it is infrastructure, ritual, and refuge. It punctuates the day with iced coffees, toasted sandwiches, and the soft hum of air conditioning. It is a place of arrival without destination. Yet, embedded in this familiarity is a quiet tension: the rhythm of consumption mirrors the transient pace of those who pass through it. Quick, efficient, replaceable. A culture of immediacy—mirroring the itinerant lives of travelers who drift through, never fully staying.  There is a tenderness in this contradiction. Everyone loves 7/11. Not despite its uniformity, but because of it. It offers consistency in a landscape of movement. But that same consistency flattens difference, turning moments into transactions, encounters into routines.  This photograph captures that ambivalence. The saturated red hue—produced by pre-souped Kodak Gold 200 film—bathes the scene in a sense of heat and nostalgia, as if the image itself is dissolving under the weight of time and repetition. The familiar green-orange stripes are still visible, but altered, almost overwhelmed. What remains is an atmosphere: dense, fleeting, and slightly melancholic.  A place where everyone meets—yet no one stays. | analogbysissi]]></title>
          <link>https://www.cizucu.com/en/photos/T23GHpu4jeBibaaVi8wS</link>
          <description><![CDATA[See more of analogbysissi's photography on cizucu.]]></description>
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          <pubDate>Fri, 10 Apr 2026 15:23:09 GMT</pubDate>
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            <media:title><![CDATA[Under the fluorescent glow of 7‑Eleven, a quiet kind of democracy unfolds. Here, in the threshold between street and shelter, differences dissolve—if only for a moment. Foreigners in transit, Thai locals on routine, migrant workers from Myanmar on break: they all arrive with the same gestures, the same small transactions, the same pause in motion. The counter becomes a shared horizon, where currencies, languages, and lives briefly align.  In Thailand, 7/11 is more than a convenience store—it is infrastructure, ritual, and refuge. It punctuates the day with iced coffees, toasted sandwiches, and the soft hum of air conditioning. It is a place of arrival without destination. Yet, embedded in this familiarity is a quiet tension: the rhythm of consumption mirrors the transient pace of those who pass through it. Quick, efficient, replaceable. A culture of immediacy—mirroring the itinerant lives of travelers who drift through, never fully staying.  There is a tenderness in this contradiction. Everyone loves 7/11. Not despite its uniformity, but because of it. It offers consistency in a landscape of movement. But that same consistency flattens difference, turning moments into transactions, encounters into routines.  This photograph captures that ambivalence. The saturated red hue—produced by pre-souped Kodak Gold 200 film—bathes the scene in a sense of heat and nostalgia, as if the image itself is dissolving under the weight of time and repetition. The familiar green-orange stripes are still visible, but altered, almost overwhelmed. What remains is an atmosphere: dense, fleeting, and slightly melancholic.  A place where everyone meets—yet no one stays. | analogbysissi]]></media:title>
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