Behind The Lens

On the subject of photography, Henri Cartier-Bresson writes, “To take photographs is to hold one's breath when all faculties converge in the face of fleeing reality.” The current climate is testament to a different kind of fleeing reality; the decay of our natural environment. Marnie Hawson’s photography converges storytelling with social responsibility.

“As a former environmental scientist, I'm hardwired to tread lightly in everything I do,” says Marnie. She was raised on acreage and was quickly absorbed by the romance of the Australian bush. “I was rarely allowed to watch TV and instead spent hours outdoors making cubbies out of branches, exploring gorges down the back of our property and hunting for yabbies in the dams.”

As Marnie explored the natural landscape, she developed a curious eye for detail while fine tuning a purpose-driven philosophy. At the beginning of her photography career, Marnie captured “an honest trade,” a series of portraits highlighting twenty trades. “They are all what I considered honest trades.” She explains, “Honest trades involve manual labour and hard work. To me, there is far more value in something that has had love and sweat poured into the production of it.” In a striking set of portraits titled Farrier, the blacksmith’s face disappears in a cloud of smoke as heats the horseshoe.

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Worth Waking Up For

The Italian designer Massimo Vignelli once said, “Good design is a language, not a style.” Bowen & Kenneth’s interiors don’t just conjure an artful voice, the homes they furnish become flirtatious conversations that highlight the luxury of living.

Amongst Egyptian chandeliers, French provincial porters chairs and a hand-carved Indian Mandala; a myriad of ornate furnishings illuminate the imagination of designers Johanathan Kenneth McMahon and Samuel Bowen Pridmore, co-founders of the Bowen & Kenneth boutique in Daylesford.

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A Song For The Soul

“You've got a song you're singing from your gut, you want that audience to feel it in their gut,” writes Johnny Cash. “And you've got to make them think that you're one of them sitting out there with them too.”

As singer-songwriter Sean Dixon strums his guitar, his voice welcomes you into his past. On live stream videos he posts online, Sean stands barefoot with shaggy hair that sways as he wrestles with his guitar and cries out a poetic lament. “I can only do the best that I can,” sings Sean, “I find it hard to know what it is to be a man.”

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Regeneration Generation

For Sam White, it was a series of ‘a-ha’ moments that revolutionised not only the way he farms but how he lives his life. The first came in 2005, shortly after he’d acknowledged his passion for farming.

Sam had decided to return full time to the 850-hectare property his family has been farming in the granite hills around Sidonia for more than 150 years to work with his dad raising cattle and sheep. Sitting on the veranda of the modern rammed earth home that he built on the beautiful property with his wife Miranda and where they live with their two children Angus and Matilda, Sam explains the initial a-ha moment.

“I’d been learning about organic farming and alternative agriculture in Melbourne and I began to see that there was something that wasn’t working on the farm,” he says. “We kept having the same problems, the same diseases, the same lack of feed – some of the paddocks would be black from the sheep staying on them too long. There was just no grass left.

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Reasons to get Lost in January

Lavandula's Lavender Harvest festival is a celebration of all things lavender, and it's an opportunity for visitors to discover the many processes and uses of this wonderful plant. The process includes harvesting with hand sickles, bunching for drying, winnowing the owers and seeds, and distilling for essential oil and oral water. Its uses are many and varied from dried ower arrangements, lling potpourri satchels, culinary lavender used in cooking and lavender oil and water for therapeutic and medicinal use.

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LOST News - January

Welcome back to the roaring 20’s! It’s the start of a new decade and wow it’s exciting!

A new year always sparks conversations of ‘change’ and ‘resolutions’, but I’m jumping off the ‘new year, new me’ boat and hopping on board the self care and compassion train. I’ve been volunteering once a week with a large young family in Melbourne - and I can’t begin to explain the positive change it has had on my life. This experience has de nitely guided my compassion and my increased focus on Lost Magazine. Collating these heartwarming stories and images is a special opportunity.

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