Rainy travel days never looked so good.
Photographer Dusan Stojancevic has a unique technique for photographing the world. Rather than aiming his camera at the subject, Stojancevic turns his lens toward its reflection in teensy water droplets.
The product is a gorgeous array of globules containing scenic destinations like Sagrada Familia, the Brooklyn Bridge, Belgradeโs National Assembly, and many more. Stojancevic calls these droplets โmicrocosmos.โ
โI was enthusiastic about macro photography, and I wanted to do something on my own,โ Stojancevic said. โThis was the result.โ
Stojancevic doesnโt alter or edit his pictures, preferring to let the raw image stand on its own. โAll of the photos are just the way the camera sees it,โ Stojancevic said. โI just tune some things and clean if I find dirtiness.โ
To be fair, Stojancevic canโt wait for a rainy day to come along to get the perfect shot. โDroplets are planned, I cannot wait for the rain to come!โ Stojancevic explained. โI put them usually without any pattern. I want it to be as chaotic and natural as it can.โ
Explore the world through Stojancevicโs breathtaking water droplet photos below.