This is a meditative study of the North Cornish coastline, photographed in conditions that erase distraction—fog, dusk, silence. In these liminal moments, the landscape reveals itself not as spectacle, but as trace. These images are built on slowness. Instead of grand vistas or saturated skies, we encounter negative space, subtle tonality, and dissolving form. A solitary rock. The whisper of a tide. The last light before cloud swallows it.ach photograph is a moment not of arrival, but of transition—a horizon that vanishes, a shoreline that waits.
Miles Hewitt?Boorman began photographing in 2021 as a personal act of stillness—a way to slow down and pay attention in a world of speed and distraction. His practice is rooted in slowness, subtlety, and reverence for the overlooked. Working across the UK and Arctic regions, his images reflect a minimalist approach to both wildlife and landscape photography, shaped by patience and quiet observation.