
A corner in the World's Borough - Queens, NY

Fish market in Zanzibar, Tanzania

A man in a national strike in Pereira, Colombia

A Mexican woman dressed in traditional attire walked amongst tourists selling Mexican textile

A man selling beaded jewelry in Baru Island in Cartagena, Colombia

Mountain tops of a town in Medellin, Coolmbia

A boy and his dog in San Andres Island, Colombia

A group of friends playing Dominoes in a street corner in Corona, Queens, during the pandemic

A woman wearing traditional Peruvian Andean clothing crossing the streets of Cusco with her calf on her back

A Quinceañera walking up to the Angel of Independence in Mexico City, Mexico

A Mexican couple kissing in front of hat stand in a market in Guanajuato, Mexico. Part of a larger project - Mexico is for Lovers

A boy and his proud grandfather in Oaxaca, Mexico

Don Alberto, owner of Sombreros Alberly, showing us the hat-making process

Men in Zanzibar playing mancala, a traditional board game played in East Africa

A group of men and children playing Dominoes in the back of an open food market in the Dominican Republic

A boy and his women family members in a traditional parade in Oaxaca, Mexico

A little girl in traditional Chinese attire on Chinese New Year in New York City

Two boys with their women caretakers in a Maasai village in Arusha, Tanzania

Male dominated corner in a street in Stone Town, Zanzibar. Women are usually not seen in the corner where only men gather to socialize

Woman selling Santeria beads in a corner street in Havana, Cuba

Andean children in Cusco, Peru looking at sheets of stickers I brought for children street vendors

A busy street in Stone Town, Zanzibar

Girls getting ready to perform a traditional Oaxaquen dance for a parade in Oaxaca, Mexico

Children having fun in Zanzibar, Tanzania

A family enjoying their time in the Unisphere in Queens, New York

Children playing soccer in Zanzibar

Kite festival in Jeríco, Antioquia, a small town in Colombia

The calf being pulled away from mama so she can get milked

Tato, a man I met in Puerto Rico with his two piglets
