03/03/2026
I did not carry my heavy camera that day. It was just my phone in my pocket, like any other ordinary outing. Holi in the streets never waits for perfect gear. It happens fast, loud, unpredictable.
And then BIHAN ran ahead of me.
Before I could even think about framing, he turned back slightly, holding that yellow smoke flare like a tiny torch of rebellion. Within seconds, the street disappeared inside a thick cloud of color. The hardware shop, the coiled pipes, the concrete pavement, everything faded behind that fierce yellow.
I raised my mobile almost instinctively. No settings. No careful adjustment. Just reflex. As a street photographer, I have learned that sometimes the best moments do not give you time to prepare. They demand that you trust your eye.
In that frame, I was not just documenting a festival. I was watching my son claim his space in the chaos. His T-shirt was already layered with colors from the day, like a map of every laugh and every chase. He did not care about composition, symmetry, or light. He cared about the thrill of watching smoke pour out into the open air.
What moved me most was his fearlessness. The way he swung his arm, the way he stood in the middle of an ordinary market street as if it were his personal stage. Holi has that power. It breaks routine. It erases the grey.
The mobile click froze a second that would otherwise dissolve into air, just like that yellow cloud. Maybe the image is not technically perfect. Maybe it carries the rawness of a quick capture. But it holds truth. And for me, truth is always more important than perfection.
One day BIHAN will grow up. He will walk these streets differently. The smoke flares will be replaced by responsibilities. But in this photograph, taken on a simple mobile phone, he will always remain that small storm of color, turning an ordinary afternoon into something unforgettable.
And I will always remember that sometimes, the best street photograph is the one you take as a father, not just as a photographer.