Drifting with my daughter

  • Dates
    2024 - Ongoing
  • Author
  • Topics Daily Life, Documentary, Street Photography
  • Location Tallinn, Estonia

Since the birth of our fourth child, Rebeka, my days have unfolded in slow walks through Tallinn. I leave home to shoot the street, but return with fragments: still lifes, odd details, small discoveries that happen only at her pace.

This is not only my project. It is also my daughter’s. Thanks to her.

Walking with a child can be exhausting — I’ve felt that too. She is, after all, the fourth child I’m raising. I see young mothers pushing strollers with blank faces, heads down, eyes on their phones. It isn’t necessarily escapism. It might be ordering a new snowsuit because autumn arrived. It might be paying bills. It might be anything.

Our first three children came one after another while I was working full-time as a theatre lighting master. For years I ran between work and home with no time to breathe. I didn’t even know I was allowed to have time of my own. Of course I burned out. My wife did too. I left the theatre. And for more than six years I didn’t touch a camera. Mine had died — the tiny internal battery failed, the kind you can’t just replace. I missed it. I missed it constantly. But I had no time.

This project is not just walking with my daughter through a car-centred city.
It is also the story of a nearly middle-aged white man trying to befriend his camera again.
This camera. The Nikon D750 — not the best, something I’ll have to replace one day, but not today. Today it does what I need. I’ve also found my favourite lenses. Full frame — new lenses are expensive. So I went backwards. Back to where so many things began: the Micro-Nikkor 55mm f/2.8 AI-S and the Micro-Nikkor 105mm f/2.8 AI-S. Wonderful lenses. Incredibly slow. Everything is manual, but where am I rushing? Only diapers require speed.

One more thing: everything here is straight out of the camera. No editing, not even cropping.
I prefer to “waste” time behind the camera rather than in front of a computer.
And if I’m allowed some pathos, this is my way of honouring all the analogue photographers whose work has become iconic over decades — and will remain so. Created within the limitations of film, which gave their worlds so much character.

I go out thinking I’m doing street photography, yet I always return with something in between — a threshold space. Like the threshold between the two memorials. These liminal places create tension for me.

For some reason, with a camera in my hand, I often look away from the event. I’ve always done that. I’ve felt guilt and embarrassment for it. I am not a “real” photographer. Real photographers cover important things. Famine. War. Drama. Important subjects — not emptiness, not silence, not mistakes.

Every photograph here has something wrong in it. And that is fine.
I value those mistakes.
Just as I value the spaces I walk through.

I do not shout. I do not demand. I simply observe the world, trying to disturb it as little as possible, sometimes even afraid to wake it up. This is how I discover the space around me — as much as I’m allowed, at the pace I’m allowed.

This is a small selection from a project that has lasted more than a year and will continue.
I don’t know for how long.
But that isn’t the important part.
There will be another one when this one ends.

© Reispass - Image from the Drifting with my daughter photography project
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“While She Sleeps”There’s so much you want to get done while a child sleeps — and yet almost nothing gets finished.There’s always one second missing.Still, somehow, there’s always time for one cigarette, the same way an alcoholic always finds room for one more beer.

© Reispass - Image from the Drifting with my daughter photography project
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"Step by step"This building was new and modern when I was a child.Now it’s worn down, outdated, in the way — a place we assume children shouldn’t be.But children don’t care where they are.It’s always us, the adults, who decide that for them.

© Reispass - Image from the Drifting with my daughter photography project
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“New Development Choreography”Back then I could watch the cranes for as long as I wanted.Soon it will depend on Rebeka — how long their choreography keeps us still.My boredom, her excitement.A reminder to feel joy whenever a child is still amazed.

© Reispass - Image from the Drifting with my daughter photography project
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"Stumble of a Swan"A hint of a sub-series I call ‘Swans’.How humans leave them behind — the places, the gestures, the neglect.Real swans are rare; even a vandalised Bolt scooter can become one.

© Reispass - Image from the Drifting with my daughter photography project
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“Close Air Support”In war films they call for air support — danger arriving from somewhere behind the horizon.Here the strike comes directly from above.The people waiting for the green light have no idea what’s over their heads.I saw the birds; they didn’t.Knowing the risk is its own kind of privilege.And yes — catching the actual drop would’ve been bonus points.

© Reispass - Image from the Drifting with my daughter photography project
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“Kill me with a shovel”Zinc poles are cheaper, but they clutter the streetscape.It’s what people call pipe-porn, characteristic of post-Soviet cities.Sometimes the light is so good that even a zinc pole becomes tolerable.There is no bad dish — only bad cooks.

© Reispass - Image from the Drifting with my daughter photography project
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“Fly, Little Fly, Fly!”Flies are cautious creatures — alert in every direction, impossible to approach.But sometimes they slip into a daze.With autumn they hide indoors, half-asleep, and when the winter heating starts they mistake it for spring.They have no idea what season they’re in.

© Reispass - Image from the Drifting with my daughter photography project
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“Ok ok, I cheated!”This one wasn’t taken on a walk — it wasn’t.But sometimes you want to cheat a little.I’m honest with the camera: everything is straight out of it, as clean as it gets.This was made at home, on the windowsill.Rebeka was with me, so the honesty still counts.

© Reispass - Image from the Drifting with my daughter photography project
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"Cougar"In the 90s and early 2000s this was a ghetto.Barracks for workers from the old industries.Drugs, crime, alcoholism — all with a beautiful sea view.How romantic.Now the upper middle class lives here.So boring.This clover knows.

© Reispass - Image from the Drifting with my daughter photography project
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"WTF"What is this?!Looks like dog shit — but it isn’t.Looks like a fungus — but it isn’t.What is this thing?!Found in Kasepark, not far from where I shot ‘Cougar’.Did someone smear dog shit onto a tree and a fungus decided to grow on it?Do things like that actually happen?

© Reispass - Image from the Drifting with my daughter photography project
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“Another Milestone”Another milestone, about a kilometre further.Near Kopli Cemetery Park — once a graveyard, bulldozed flat by the communists in the 1960s and turned into a park.They know how to humiliate. They still do.

© Reispass - Image from the Drifting with my daughter photography project
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“Sweat, Water, Tears: Our Trinity”Without water there would be no sweat and no tears.We romanticize sweat in sauna culture, hide it with deodorant, honour hard work.Men here don’t cry — women do.Every third woman in Estonia is a victim of domestic violence.I have three daughters.Which future am I preparing them for?

© Reispass - Image from the Drifting with my daughter photography project
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"Pluming Feather"I noticed a worn-out human soul — beautiful, wounded, learning, forgiving itself and others.I tried to find the right frame, but I stopped when I heard my child cry.And that was it.The search for a soul left unfinished.Some things matter more — go find your child.

© Reispass - Image from the Drifting with my daughter photography project
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"Ranger Crow"Like Peter McIndoe’s ‘Birds Aren’t Real’ — except this one is.Real bird, real nature, no myth.Still, we trust myths more than facts.Maybe we need to soften reality, pretend we live in a fairy tale.The world is beautiful without one.

© Reispass - Image from the Drifting with my daughter photography project
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“This City Is Mine.”This city is hers.Maarjamäe Memorial — a monument built by occupiers for occupiers on occupied land.They know how to humiliate, and they never learned how to lose.We did.You can only win if you can lose.She has already won — and not only my heart.

© Reispass - Image from the Drifting with my daughter photography project
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“Ceci n’est pas une porte.”This is not a door.And not a memorial.It is the space in between.To the right, the cenotaph for Estonia’s victims of communism;to the left, the Soviet memorial built by the regime itself.Side by side.It’s the space between them that holds the tension for me.

© Reispass - Image from the Drifting with my daughter photography project
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“Constable Gull”Forget the mermaid — this isn’t Disney.Captain Nemo won’t jump out of the sea either.Here we try to catch flounder with a fork.She is an angel, a real one, guiding the drowned sailors upward.As real as catching fish with a fork.

© Reispass - Image from the Drifting with my daughter photography project
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“Empty Hands”We work. And work.Work that often leads nowhere.We do it for our children, for a pension fund, for a future we can’t quite define.On the way we give up almost everything beautiful in the present.And in the end our hands are still empty.What is there to take with you into the coffin?