The newest edition of FujiLove Magazine is now live, and it’s a rich, thoughtful issue that once again places photography—not gear—at the center of the conversation. Issue 118 (January 2026) brings together personal stories, long-form projects, practical insight, and a strong sense of photographic intent across 130+ pages.
At the heart of this edition is an in-depth conversation with Yuji Igarashi, exploring his relationship with photography and the Fujifilm way. Rather than a technical profile, this piece moves through memory, family, travel, and the idea of enjoying the photographic process itself—images as companions to lived experience rather than trophies. His photographs of mountains, journeys, and quiet moments set the tone for the entire issue.
The photographic features that follow are deeply personal and grounded in place. Fernando Pedro Salgado reflects on how Prague became his classroom, shaping his way of seeing through patience, rhythm, and black-and-white observation. David Perelman-Hall’s moving photo essay from Tuscumbia, Alabama, turns away from literal documentation and toward intention, using churches as symbols of faith, community, and spiritual presence. Alex Ohtea completely shifts the street-photography paradigm by becoming the moving subject himself—photographing life across Africa while cycling from Morocco to South Africa.
The issue also highlights the FujiLove community, showcasing images made around the world and the stories behind them, reminding us how diverse yet connected this global Fujifilm ecosystem truly is. An interview with Irina Holliday adds another layer, tracing an early photographic journey shaped by curiosity, street photography, and learning to see the ordinary differently.
Complementing the inspiration are practical, experience-driven articles: breaking long-held street photography “rules,” mastering square-format composition, understanding focal lengths, refining exposure technique, and working effectively with Lightroom presets. Each piece is rooted in real photographic practice, not abstract theory.
Altogether, this edition feels calm, deliberate, and mature. It’s about slowing down, trusting your way of seeing, and building a meaningful relationship with photography over time. Issue 118 is an invitation to look more closely, photograph more honestly, and enjoy the process—exactly what FujiLove has always stood for.


















