By funtraveller on Skatehive
On most days, my commute is a blur of footsteps, metal, and hurried glances. Today I slowed down and gave a little attention to the things everyone walks past. This set is a small ode to the overlooked, objects that silently keep the city moving while asking for nothing back. I kept my window-frame layout to tell four tiny stories. The brushed steel panel carries a soft halo of fingerprints and light—evidence of thousands of hands. In black and white, the smudges turn into fog on glass, and the reflections pick up a subtle curve that color would have buried. Next is the “BREAK GLASS FOR KEY” cover. It’s designed to be invisible until the moment it matters, but those blocky letters feel like a chant. I love how monochrome turns the plastic into something sculptural, with a crisp edge and a clean shadow that anchors the frame. The escalator teeth are a rhythm machine—line after line, step after step. Seen front-on, they look almost like a rolling field, each rib catching a thread of ligh