PROJECT L: PART 127
East Pasila in Winter

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What a winter!

No, wait. Let’s start over again. That was way too enthusiastic.

What a winter…

Much better. Unlike the shitty winter we’re having down here in Finland.

Traditionally February has been the coldest—and the snowiest—month here in Finland. But, as you can see, we’ve been lacking snow.

By just plain measurements, we’ve also lacked cold. It’s been hovering around zero degrees Celsius (32°F), barely freezing. But if you add wind chill to that and add the negative insulation factor of latex, oh boy. It feels so cold. So damn cold.

We’re few kilometres from the ocean, but still the cold breeze blew over us. And not in the good way one would hope.

Let’s all thank Bunny for sacrificing her well-being for our little latex art project.

After freezing Bunny’s butt off on the windy pedestrian overpass, we sought shelter from below its deck. We spent some time in the stairways, pretending that it wasn’t cold.

But it was. It was still damn cold. So very, very cold.

But Bunny endured! She’s a champion.

To reward Bunny for her bravery—and to thaw her—we escaped the cold reality of outdoor life into a nearby mall to grab a cup of hot chocolate and a cupcake of room temperature chocolate.

“Too hot,” Bunny cried out in Finnish. At least the coffee mug fit her outfit!

The little café was in a very public spot where probably over a hundred people walked past while we spent our time there, waiting for the (very) hot chocolate to cool down.

As is usual in Finland, nobody batted an eye for Bunny’s outfit. Shiny clothing seems to be even more casual here, and most people don’t realise the difference between latex, wetlook or PVC. Those poor things.

After Bunny had thawed, we moved on—and where else should we move on, if not outdoors, to freeze her yet again?

This little artificial Teletubby-ass-looking hill was the coldest place yet. Two tall buildings formed a kind of a wind tunnel pointing directly towards the ocean, standing on a large bridge, giving the winds the perfect direction to freeze poor Bunny’s latex butt.

Not wanting to escalate things, we moved back inside, into the depths of the mall, trying to find places with good lighting and not that much people around.

Somewhere in the bowels of the mall we found this exact set of escalators, which we used for both escalating and de-escalating things.

Things being mostly Bunny, and a little of me.

The few passers-by we had around here were amused by our antics of going up and down. But nowadays people kind of expect to see people photographing stuff for social medias, so we could continue uninterrupted.

I’m actually very happy for the current “photograph everything” style of things, as I can do my stuff and just blend in. Compared to ten, twenty years ago, having someone photograph outdoors was always kind of a spectacle—not to mention someone photographing latex!

Either my work with the project has spread to everybody (yeaaaah, no) or people are just more open and friendly about these sorts of things.

I’m going with the latter one. People generally tend to be more friendly nowadays, at least in the little bubble where I’ve been living in.

Perhaps I’ve just surrounded myself with nice people.

Right next to the escalators we found this little corner of modern concrete brutalism; bare concrete, straight lines and cast marks embedded in the concrete—a wonderfully utilitarian outlook on things.

My definition might not be best, for I am not an architect, nor even someone who knows how to identify concrete from graphite from a distance while sitting in an Mi-8 helicopter.

Where I was born, in the city of Järvenpää, the whole goddamn church is made of concrete with all of the cast marks embedded in it. It’s an ugly thing, but an ugly, beautiful thing. If this makes sense. This might have affected my way of viewing things, and I’ve come to appreciate how concrete looks.

It also creates a wonderful juxtaposition with the shiny, elegant latex. Especially with those thin LED strips reflecting from Bunny’s suit.

Such a strange location for storing your luggage! In the deep bowels of the mall, with barely any people around.

This feels like a location that could be in an agent movie of some kind, hiding things in the locker for someone else to grab them.

We did not try if Bunny would fit there. She probably would have.

As if we hadn’t frozen Bunny enough, we decided to go outside once more! Just this one last gig, as the aforementioned agent movies always do. Just this one!

We also wanted to see some trains, but, alas, we didn’t want to wait for the next one. It was, you know, pretty cold.

 

Bunny’s time had come, for she was frozen solid. Time to put on the pink winter jacket again.

After the photoshoot, when Bunny took of her suit, she confessed that her legs were very tingly, to almost being painful.

So, yes—we had frozen Bunny. for the sake of our little latex art project.

Sorry, Bunny!


 
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Latex used in the project

Black made-to-measure catsuit by Bright & Shiny

One Response

  1. Luis García says:

    She’s such a beautiful! Absolutely adorable, I love how the catsuit and the skirt look on her. Also, I love the photographer’s work, he tooks really great and perfect pictures.

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