An ongoing visual blog and research project documenting found chairs in public and domestic spaces.
Chairs are often overlooked—utilitarian, temporary, easily discarded. But in their wear, their placement, and their posture, they quietly hold stories. Through Karasi Finds, I document chairs encountered in my everyday surroundings, framing them not as static furniture but as ephemeral markers of presence, memory, and emotion.
Each chair becomes a portrait of absence: someone sat here, waited here, left something behind. Some evoke solitude, others intimacy; some lean against walls like they’re resting, others stand like sentinels. This project is both archival and poetic—a study of overlooked forms that speak softly about human lives, rituals, and rhythms.
Instagram: @Karasi.Finds
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