The 6×6 Project is a long-term photographic study made entirely with a Hasselblad 500 CM, a precision medium-format camera known for its modular design and the distinctive clarity of its 6×6 square negatives. Working with it naturally slows the process down, turning each frame into a deliberate act of observation.
This camera itself became part of the story. After purchasing the Hasselblad, it required over two and a half months of servicing and restoration before it was fully functional. That delay set the tone for the project early on nothing about this process is fast or immediate.
every roll will be personally developed and scanned before it can be considered for the book, keeping the entire workflow fully internal & hands-on from exposure to final file.
With only twelve exposures per roll and no fixed orientation, the square format removes any sense of default composition, demanding patience and intention in every frame. My hope is that over time, these constraints will build a truly special body of work.
27.25152° N, 80.22356° W
Roll 003 ~ 06/21/26 ~ Kodak Gold 200
Developed at 102° For 4.5 min = 1x Push