Empty wet market at night
#photographyOne of these back alleys between 27-level high apartment towers.
#photographyInterestingly, this sign was only in English.
Sai Wan Estate, Kennedy Town
#photographyWhat I really like on these trips are these small details: This hole in the gate, just for the truck's mirror. And it seems that’s there for exactly this truck for ages.
Mini buses sleeping in Mong Kok
„Hear me out! Let’s build 4 buildings on top of each other, and then put a 45-storey skyscraper on top of those.“ – „On a mountain?“ – „On a mountain!“
The Hill Road Flyover is such a bizarre structure. I love it!
I usually don’t like car infrastructure, but look at this!
The bridge winds its way between the high-rises in a steep S-curve.
What I didn't realised until now is that I took another photo of the same alley from the other side.
https://chaos.social/@ubahnverleih/115996970022459133Looking at these pictures I remember how cool it was to explore all these cute small stairs and alleys around Kennedy Town at night.
Some of these alleys are really narrow.
And some of the stairs are quite high. Some of them even have escalators or elevators – just to reach the next street. The view from the top is spectacular!
Look, I found some more photos of alleys and stairs. All the pictures i posted today and yesterday are from the same 3 hour night walk.
That was the last photo I took that day, and so it's also the last one i post today. But I have a lot more I will post in the next days. Some of them even have daylight.
#Fensterfreitag View from Dragon Centre in Sham Shui Po towards Mong Kok
This Church has a McDonald’s
The skyscarper is hiding behind the bridge. It's a shyscraper
I love these small shops that often stay open late into the night, serving food to night workers.
But the best thing about them: They are often guarded by cats.
The cats are the stars of the shops or even of the whole street.
They even guard hardware stores and workshops.
Look at these i found in the electronics markets in Sham Shui Po.
But not only in Hong Kong. We also spotted some in the Dafen oil painting village in Shenzhen.
And in Dafen (Shenzhen) we stumbled across the cutest cat café ever. The cats weren't caged, but could come and go as they pleased via the balcony.
And i totally missed that it's
#caturday today, which perfectly fits on this whole thread…
Yesterday I mentioned the Dafen Oil Painting Village. But what is it? 🧵
So, when we hear Shenzhen we think of electronics manufacturing. But Shenzhen is also very good in producing other things: Oil paintings. Let me explain. 🧵
In 1987, back when Shenzhen was only a small city, Huang Jiang had a workshop near the Hong Kong border. He produced replicas of famous paintings for the western market.
But as the city and the electronics industry grew, so did the rents. Huang Jiang needed to move his workshop. He chose the small and quiet village of Dafen. At the time it was not part of Shenzhen, meaning the painters did not require a permit to live there.
Huang Jiang was able to hire more painters and became quite successful. Some of Jiang‘s workers opened own workshops and painters from all over china moved to Dafen. Shenzhen factory workers hoping for more flexible working hours may also have come to Dafen to try their luck as painters.
In 1992, when a client ordered 360,000 paintings and they had to be finished in only 6 weeks, all the village’s painters joined forces and developed a factory-like assembly-line method. Each painter specialised in a specific part of the image. This drastically improved both speed and quality, enabling them to complete the task in time.
If you have a replica of a famous painting, chances are high it was painted in Dafen. I found numbers, that in it‘s peak times 50-70% of all oil painting replicas sold world wide were produced in Dafen.
Today the painters doesn’t only replicate famous paintings, but also make their own creations and develop their own styles and interpretations.
A mix of classic images, anime characters and portraits of celebrities, as well as landscapes, from which it is hard to tell whether they are classic or the painter's own creation.