The wonderland project from Kirsty Mitchell is a touching and enchanting series bringing a fantasy world to life. It shows what attention to details, creativity and plain core dedication can achieve.

Gaia-The-Birth-of-an-End Gammelyns-Daughter- Gammelyns-Daughter-a-Waking-Dream- The-Ghost-Swift- The-Last-Door-of-Autumn The-Guidance-of-Stray-Souls The-Faraway-Tree- The-Storyteller- The-Queens-Armada- A-Floral-Birth-The wonderland series started at 2009 and has been an ongoing project for 5 years now detailing the inner world of photographer Kirsty Mitchell, after her mother passed away. Kirsty writes:

“My mother was an English teacher who spent over thirty years inspiring generations of children with her stories and plays. She was rarely seen without her head in a book, or writing in her own vast diaries, which she had kept since I was young. She was lost to a brain tumour that left her too ill to be brought home to England from the small French village where she and my father had retired. Instead of a funeral full of her ex pupils, we had to make do with a tiny family gathering which left me heart broken, and needing to do something that would never let her be forgotten.

In the months that followed real life became a difficult place to deal with, and I found myself retreating further into an alternative existence through the portal of my camera. This escapism grew into the concept of creating an unexplained storybook without words, dedicated to her, that would echo the fragments of the fairytales she read to me constantly as a child. Originally it began as a small idea in the form of just a few shoots that would span the summer, but nothing prepared me for the emotional journey it became, and the very special friendships it produced. From the moment I met hair and make-up artist Elbie Van Eeden, there was a sense of something deeper. We became very close, and the project blossomed into our own private playground within the woodlands that surrounded my home. Both of us were still in full time jobs and so had to spend our evenings and weekends creating props, wigs, and sets out of the most basic of materials, to try and achieve results as convincing as possible. There was little budget, so we relied on the kindness of strangers donating their unwanted treasures, and anything else we could scavenge or customise.”#

[Wonderland 2009-2013 | Kirsty Mitchell]

(via DIY Photography)