Routes
A photo walk outside, kept in the order it was walked. First step to last.
A Route is a single walk, photographed outside, published in the order it was walked. Streets, canals, a neighbourhood at the start of an evening, a park in autumn light, a stretch of polder under heavy weather — whatever the day actually had. The first frame is the first thing seen, the last is where the walk ended, and everything between is what got picked up along the way.
The discipline is keeping the walk intact. The order on the page is the order on the ground; chronological by capture time, frames where the walk put them. The in-between moments earn their place because they're part of how the strong frames got reached. A place at walking pace shows its rhythm across the whole run.
Routes exist because a walk is the closest a still photograph gets to being a story. The sequence carries time, distance, and weather — the slow shift in light from start to end, the mood change after a turn, the way a place looks different on the way back. That arc is what a Route is for, and it holds together whatever made the individual frames.