Slow down and discover a universe of tiny stories.

Overview

Notice is a photo book that was created in Vancouver, BC, by photographer Wesley Verhoeve over the course of 123 daily photo walks between April 4th and August 5th, 2020.

Notice explores how the intentional slowing down of time can help us be more creative and accomplish bigger goals.

The process of making the book included 307 hours of walking around Vancouver, 1.6 million steps, or 1230km — or the equivalent to a flight from Vancouver to Saskatchewan. 34,194 photographs were taken to create a final body of work of 84 images, gathered in this book.


Click to download high-res images. More can be made available if you like (email [email protected] with your request)

https://s3-us-west-2.amazonaws.com/secure.notion-static.com/eed39c1a-c541-487d-811a-cb7421a28640/Wesley-Verhoeve-NOTICE-cover-2048px-square.jpg

https://s3-us-west-2.amazonaws.com/secure.notion-static.com/3cf227fb-29c9-42bf-acda-aac7d3cbfa93/Wesley-Verhoeve-NOTICE-social-IG-Story-cover.jpg

Wesley-Verhoeve-NOTICE-spread-2048px-square.jpg

Wesley-Verhoeve-NOTICE-spread-colour-poppies-2048px-square.jpg

https://s3-us-west-2.amazonaws.com/secure.notion-static.com/59bd46c2-ba26-4e79-9cb2-5294b8e05d8c/Wesley-Verhoeve-NOTICE-cover-stack-2048px-square.jpg

https://s3-us-west-2.amazonaws.com/secure.notion-static.com/183ae3d1-c264-4ea3-9019-f88a3ec436c8/Wesley-Verhoeve-NOTICE-social-IG-Story-cover-stack.jpg

Wesley-Verhoeve-NOTICE-spread-alt-2048px-square.jpg

https://s3-us-west-2.amazonaws.com/secure.notion-static.com/95d5c87a-2c1e-42eb-bccf-e421e12194b6/Wesley-Verhoeve-NOTICE-social-asset-cover-with-text-2048px-square.jpg

https://s3-us-west-2.amazonaws.com/secure.notion-static.com/39c5e12a-c0a6-493d-b451-2432417407dd/Wesley-Verhoeve-NOTICE-social-IG-Story-zine.jpg

Wesley-Verhoeve-NOTICE-spread-colour-2048px-square.jpg


Background

After two years of continuous travel between the great urban centers of New York City, Tokyo, Berlin, Buenos Aires, Barcelona, and other cities, the world ground to a halt.

By virtue of this most random timing, I found myself stuck in a place I had never been before. A small but beautiful suburban neighborhood of Vancouver was to be my home for the first 5 months of the pandemic.

Everything that was my “normal” suddenly changed to its opposite. Instead of traveling the globe, I was contained to one neighborhood. Instead of meeting and photographing random people all day long, I’d walk for hours without seeing more than a handful of humans. Instead of my busy client work schedule, my inbox was quiet and days blended together.

So, I started walking.

Every day, a few hours, camera in hand. It became my meditative practice and helped me ground myself in a world where everything suddenly seemed uncertain.

I walked around my small neighborhood for 123 consecutive days. I practiced slowing down and paying attention so I could see better. Suddenly my world, which had initially felt so small, was revealed to be a massive universe with tiny stories everywhere.


Themes