Boogie spends every day shooting. Without a particular destination in mind, he just walks out of his house, letting his camera lead the way. For Boogie, the camera is an extension of himself.
“If I left my house without my camera, my heart would probably start pounding and I would get all tense,” Boogie said. “That thought freaks me out. I wouldn’t be able to take it. Maybe it sounds cliché, but I really do feel like I am one with my camera. I like to compare it to martial arts, when you practice some moves so many times that — when you need to use them — you don’t think, you just react. Thinking is the enemy.”
Full story on The New York Times Blog.
