FLUX Weekly Witness #3 — The Chronological Photography Revolution

FLUX WEEKLY WITNESS #3

What’s poppin’, people? It’s Dante.

Today we’re doing FLUX Weekly Witness #3, reviewing the photographs submitted over the past week.

But before getting into the actual review, I want to share something I’ve been building:

FLUX AUTO ZINE GENERATOR

FLUX is an open-source, browser-based system for automatically turning photographs into printable chronological zines.

CREATE YOUR OWN FLUX ISSUE

Generator:

http://dantesisofo.com/flux-auto-zine/

How It Works

  1. Grab 15 photographs
  2. Drag and drop them into the generator
  3. Add:
  • Your name
  • Issue number
  1. Click:
    Generate Flux Issue

The system instantly creates a printable PDF.


WHAT THE SYSTEM DOES

The generator automatically:

  • Sequences your photographs chronologically
  • Reads the metadata from your camera
  • Adds captions automatically
  • Generates:
  • Title page
  • Protocol page
  • Manifest page
  • Contact sheet
  • Printable zine PDF

Each image contains:

  • Date
  • Time
  • Photographer name
  • Issue number
  • Sequence number

The goal is:

  • Speed
  • Simplicity
  • Instant publishing
  • Removing workflow friction

PRINTING THE ZINE

Recommended Setup

  • Regular office paper
  • Double-sided printing
  • Home laser printer
  • Staple left side

I even added staple marks directly onto the cover so assembling the zine becomes frictionless.


THE FLUX PHILOSOPHY

The System

Shoot → Select → Publish → Move On

No backlog.

No perfectionism.

No over-editing.

No endless sequencing.

The goal is to continue making photographs.


WHY THIS MATTERS

The entire system is about:

  • Daily practice
  • Chronological thinking
  • Speed
  • Small JPEG workflows
  • Physical archives
  • Embracing imperfection

The imperfect qualities of:

  • printer paper
  • laser printing
  • cheap materials
  • bureaucratic aesthetics

become part of the artwork itself.


STORAGE AS ART

I’ve been storing the zines inside manila folders.

Honestly, the archive itself is starting to feel like the artwork.

You can:

  • Mix pages together
  • Rearrange sequences
  • Tape pages to walls
  • Pull pages apart
  • Create evolving archives

The work becomes alive physically.


FEATURED FLUX ISSUES

Igor Krivokon

Download:
http://dantesisofo.com/mp-files/flux_001_igor_krivokon_2026-05-01_to_2026-05-07.pdf/

Notes

Beautiful ethereal landscape work.

The imperfect printer-paper aesthetic elevates the imagery emotionally.

Minimal landscapes.
Elegant compositions.
Charcoal-like rendering.

The abstraction created through the camera sensor and light interaction becomes the poetry.


Dimitri Wessendorf

Download:
http://dantesisofo.com/mp-files/flux_001_old_3_eye_dimitri_wessendorf_2026-05-04_to_2026-05-08-pdf.pdf/

Notes

Beautiful work coming out of Seattle.

The horse photograph especially feels:

  • mystical
  • cinematic
  • surreal
  • emotionally charged

The storm clouds and atmosphere elevate the imagery beyond simple documentation.

The strange tunnel image especially pushes into mystery and ambiguity.


MIGUEL — FIRST PHOTO BOOK

Miguel created his first photobook using this FLUX protocol.

Blog Post

Miguel’s workflow breakdown

Book

FLUX Vol. I by Miguel


Important Ideas From Miguel

Miguel photographed Holy Week in his hometown without planning a giant project.

He simply:

  • Walked daily
  • Photographed what was in front of him
  • Sequenced the work afterward

Key realization:

Taking photographs is only the beginning.
Sequencing creates meaning.

Miguel also:

  • Used Blurb Bookwright
  • Experimented with ChatGPT for sequencing
  • Learned the importance of chronology and accumulation

This is exactly the spirit of FLUX.


GOING BEYOND LANGUAGE

What I’m starting to recognize with FLUX is this:

We almost want to go beyond:

  • narrative
  • explanation
  • traditional photobook storytelling

And instead embrace:

  • chronology
  • fragments of time
  • raw existence
  • visual accumulation

The captions become timestamps of reality itself.


PHOTO REVIEW NOTES

DMITRI

Rusty Building

Beautiful character.

Worn-down architecture becomes emotionally powerful through isolation and atmosphere.


Horse Photograph

One of my favorite images from Dmitri.

The horse feels:

  • mythical
  • ancient
  • spiritual

The physical print especially elevates the image.


Tunnel Image

Shocking.
Jarring.
Surreal.

Mystery and ambiguity are becoming strong directions in Dmitri’s work.


IGOR

Landscape Work

The landscapes become emotionally powerful through:

  • minimalism
  • abstraction
  • printer-paper rendering
  • negative space

The images feel elegant and painterly.


Important Observation

Our eyes do not have shutter speeds.

What keeps photography endlessly fascinating is:

The photograph is what the camera saw —
not what we saw.

The sensor interprets reality differently than human vision.

That mystery keeps photography alive.


DAWSON

Emotional Impact

Some of Dawson’s images are emotionally overwhelming.

The strongest photographs often make us:

  • pause
  • wonder
  • feel deeply

without fully understanding why.

That indescribable quality is what we’re after.


Variety

What I appreciated most this week:

  • distance
  • close-up textures
  • people
  • details
  • abstraction

There’s increasing range in the work.


THEO — LONDON

Subway Portrait

Probably my favorite image from Theo so far.

The negative space and darkness create:

  • mystery
  • tension
  • atmosphere

The face emerging from darkness becomes emotionally magnetic.


Mannequins

A reminder that:

The mundane is the game.

Windows.
Shops.
Objects.
Reflections.

All of these ordinary spaces become elevated through abstraction.


RED FOX

Found Object Photography

Really interesting compositional relationships between:

  • wheel
  • chair
  • ground
  • negative space

By removing context, mundane objects become elegant abstract forms.


Important Practice

Photographing:

  • textures
  • discarded objects
  • strange corners
  • ordinary details

puts you directly into flow state.


EUGÈNE ATGET

Study Material

I want all of you to study the work of:

Reference:

The World of Atget — Berenice Abbott flip-through


WHY ATGET MATTERS

Eugène Atget photographed Paris every single day in the late 19th and early 20th century.

He focused on:

  • streets
  • workers
  • windows
  • storefronts
  • ordinary life

He created one of the greatest visual archives in photographic history. :contentReference[oaicite:4]{index=4}


WHY FLUX IS INSPIRED BY ATGET

What inspires me most is not one masterpiece photograph.

It’s:

  • accumulation
  • consistency
  • daily practice
  • visual archiving
  • relentless documentation

Atget treated photography like a living document of existence. :contentReference[oaicite:5]{index=5}

That is the spirit of FLUX.


THE GOAL

The goal is not:

One perfect photograph.

The goal is:

A living, breathing archive in flux.


FINAL REMINDER

Create your own FLUX zine.

Upload 15 photographs.

Generate the issue.

Print it.

Share it.

Archive your existence.

And submit the work directly through the FLUX submission form.

Looking forward to seeing what all of you make.

Peace.

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