Earth Air Fire Water Spirits

Earth, Air, Fire and Water – in Sapporo

By Geoff Chaplin

A two-day relaxing trip to Sapporo, Japan – at least as relaxing as 70,000 steps of photo-walks can be in 31°C. The title emerged from the images I happened to take rather than being a pre-planned exercise. And there are a few more images at the end – let’s call them ‘Spirits’.

I shot three rolls of film: FP4+, Fomapan 100 and Delta 100 in that order, The films were developed together in PMK Pyro for 11 minutes (a slight under-development for the Delta). The camera was a Leica MP with a Zeiss 35mm f2.8 C-Biogon with a yellow or occasionally orange filter, and all images were taken hand held with exposure times down to ¼ second. It’s been a long-time since I used a 35mm lens – the only practical option on the MP/M6/M-A cameras because of the 0.72 magnification viewfinder. I’ve become spoiled by an M3 and 50s – I can feel a ‘bye-bye MP’ coming on.

Earth

Underground actually. Sapporo has a maze of underground streets, walkways between metro stations and/or air conditioned shopping streets. Side entrances to shops are often very smart and offer a getaway from the bustle of the walkway.

Winters in Hokkaido are long and harsh – four months with snow and ice on the ground so the safety conscious go below ground where possible – and nowadays summers are much hotter than only a decade ago, shade and air-con are welcome.

Earth Air Fire Water Spirits
Checking. FOMA
Earth Air Fire Water Spirits
Sapp_ro. FP4+
Earth Air Fire Water Spirits
Main walkway and reflection. FP4+
Earth Air Fire Water Spirits
Near a metro entrance. Delta

Air

Blue sky, occasional cirrus clouds and modern steel and glass high rise buildings.

Earth Air Fire Water Spirits
Cirrus. Delta
Earth Air Fire Water Spirits
From the hotel entrance. FP4+
Earth Air Fire Water Spirits
Cloud and hotel. FOMA
Earth Air Fire Water Spirits
TV tower on Odori. Delta
Earth Air Fire Water Spirits
You’re move. Delta

Fire …

… in the belly. In other words let’s go to a restaurant!

Earth Air Fire Water Spirits
Orizzonte make proper pizza – and Italian fine dining. FP4
Earth Air Fire Water Spirits
Yakitori. Delta
Earth Air Fire Water Spirits
BBQ, ramen or just a cafe. FP4+
Earth Air Fire Water Spirits
Gingiskan – a corruption of Genghis Khan so barbecued lamb and onion. FOMA

Water

The ‘river’ Sosei (featured image, FP4+). ‘River’ seems like an exaggeration though its importance is greater than the quantity of water between its banks – a man-made river dividing the west and east (address system) sides of the city and one of the first constructions on the city site; built by Otomo Kametaro.

Earth Air Fire Water Spirits
Important bloke, sitting by his construction, the river. FP4+
Earth Air Fire Water Spirits
Base of the TV tower, and park by the river. FP4+

Spirits

In the two years since I last came to Sapporo the loss of connection with the past has become starkly apparent. Imagine for a moment that every generation replaces all the infrastructure – roads and buildings – then each generation would see itself in isolation. We do this to some extent already – think of your grandmother’s grandfather – you probably can’t, whoever they were they mean nothing to you. I was walking along Tanukikoji to see my favourite row of ramshackle self-built homes and izakayas: it was gone; just car parks and office blocks, the character and history of the way of life of the people who lived there and in their era was gone. Photographs, museums and history books just don’t preserve reality only its shadow locked away.

Earth Air Fire Water Spirits
Crumbling wall and bicycle. Delta
Earth Air Fire Water Spirits
This chap really belonged somewhere else. FOMA
Earth Air Fire Water Spirits
Nice stone ball. Why? Where from? Now merely entrance decoration. FOMA
Earth Air Fire Water Spirits
Old (style?) wooden house. FP4

Share this post:

About The Author

By Geoff Chaplin
Primarily a user of Leica film cameras and 8x10 for the past 30 years, recently a mix of film and digital. Interests are concept and series based art work. Professionally trained in astronomical photography, a scientist and mathematician.
Read More Articles From Geoff Chaplin

Find more similar content on 35mmc

Use the tags below to search for more posts on related topics:

Donate to the upkeep, or contribute to 35mmc for an ad-free experience.

There are two ways to contribute to 35mmc and experience it without the adverts:

Paid Subscription – £2.99 per month and you’ll never see an advert again! (Free 3-day trial).
If you think £2.99 a month is too little, then please subscribe and I can manually edit the subscription value for you – thank you very much in advance if this is what you would like to do!

Subscribe here.

Content contributor – become a part of the world’s biggest film and alternative photography community blog. All our Contributors have an ad-free experience for life.

Sign up here.

Make a donation – If you would simply like to support Hamish Gill and 35mmc financially, you can also do so via ko-fi

Donate to 35mmc here.

Comments

Leon Winnert on Earth, Air, Fire and Water – in Sapporo

Comment posted: 20/08/2025

Lovely pictures Geoff. They have a softness to them.
Reply

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *


Geoff Chaplin replied:

Comment posted: 20/08/2025

Many thanks Leon

Reply

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *


thorsten on Earth, Air, Fire and Water – in Sapporo

Comment posted: 20/08/2025

Excellent, Geoff! In my next life I hope to be reborn in Japan ;))
Reply

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *


Geoff Chaplin replied:

Comment posted: 20/08/2025

Thanks Thorsten. Japan is a wonderful place to be a European or North American outsider. Being born here would present you with a lifestyle and constraints you would find difficult. If you get reborn here definitely do not come as a girl.

Reply

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *


thorsten replied:

Comment posted: 20/08/2025

I see. Looks like it's finally time for the german boy to visit Nippon, at least.

Reply

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *


Leave a Comment

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *