Caxton Chow

Caxton Chow www.CaxtonChow.com
HONOUR | RESPECT | RITES

Malaysia's Premier Funeral Photographer - Since 2005
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13/06/2023

This fundraising is being carried out to solicit funds to defray funeral costs for my daughter Melissa Archana John and her daughter, my grand daughter Aria Jeanne Phoenix Karmar. Both of them succumbed to injuries caused by a fire at their home located at Brampton, Toronto, Canada. The funeral serv

15/09/2021

✨Expected Death ~ When someone dies, the first thing to do is nothing. Don't run out and call the nurse. Don't pick up the phone. Take a deep breath and be present to the magnitude of the moment.

There's a grace to being at the bedside of someone you love as they make their transition out of this world. At the moment they take their last breath, there's an incredible sacredness in the space. The veil between the worlds opens.

We're so unprepared and untrained in how to deal with death that sometimes a kind of panic response kicks in. "They're dead!"

We knew they were going to die, so their being dead is not a surprise. It's not a problem to be solved. It's very sad, but it's not cause to panic.

If anything, their death is cause to take a deep breath, to stop, and be really present to what's happening. If you're at home, maybe put on the kettle and make a cup of tea.

Sit at the bedside and just be present to the experience in the room. What's happening for you? What might be happening for them? What other presences are here that might be supporting them on their way? Tune into all the beauty and magic.

Pausing gives your soul a chance to adjust, because no matter how prepared we are, a death is still a shock. If we kick right into "do" mode, and call 911, or call the hospice, we never get a chance to absorb the enormity of the event.

Give yourself five minutes or 10 minutes, or 15 minutes just to be. You'll never get that time back again if you don't take it now.

After that, do the smallest thing you can. Call the one person who needs to be called. Engage whatever systems need to be engaged, but engage them at the very most minimal level. Move really, really, really, slowly, because this is a period where it's easy for body and soul to get separated.

Our bodies can gallop forwards, but sometimes our souls haven't caught up. If you have an opportunity to be quiet and be present, take it. Accept and acclimatize and adjust to what's happening. Then, as the train starts rolling, and all the things that happen after a death kick in, you'll be better prepared.

You won't get a chance to catch your breath later on. You need to do it now.

Being present in the moments after death is an incredible gift to yourself, it's a gift to the people you're with, and it's a gift to the person who's just died. They're just a hair's breadth away. They're just starting their new journey in the world without a body. If you keep a calm space around their body, and in the room, they're launched in a more beautiful way. It's a service to both sides of the veil.

Credit for the beautiful words ~ Sarah Kerr, Ritual Healing Practitioner and Death Doula , Death doula
Her original video link is here ~ https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Q7mG0ZAym0w

Beautiful art by Columbus Community Deathcare
Always With Love

Have a blessed new year my friends!I have just updated my website www.CaxtonChow.com with more recent photos in the Gall...
02/01/2021

Have a blessed new year my friends!

I have just updated my website www.CaxtonChow.com with more recent photos in the Gallery section. Please feel free to head over. : )

Malaysia's Premier Funeral Photographer. Since 2005. Photography by Caxton Chow. Honour | Respect | Rites

30/04/2020

Today, Mr Caxton Chow, a funeral photographer, is here to share us his experiences in learning to see the beauty in different way, the beauty that you have never imagined in the funeral.

A funeral hosts that special ability to draw a significant gathering of people, hearts and soul. This matters to him. He creates memories by capturing moments with respect in their last farewell. To him, funeral photography can also be an art.

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30/04/2020

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【 #镜头下轻盈了沉重的诀别】
报导/中国报谭络瑜
人生大事如满月、生日、毕业、结婚都值得拍照留念, #为何一生人只有一次的丧礼就不能拍照呢?丧礼摄影这个在本地尚属冷门的行业,原来已有人默默干了13年,他是丧礼摄影师巢国梁(Caxton Chow)。
婚礼请摄影师很正常,丧礼请摄影师拍照就有点“那个”,很多人脑袋里马上浮现:丧礼有什么好拍?会不会拍到灵异东西?拍出来是不是全部黑白照,或伤心痛哭的画面?Caxton对种种疑问爽朗一笑而过,每次他向人介绍自己的职业时,要不是被当成开玩笑,就是被好奇问以上问题。
#专业态度信任和尊重
丧礼摄影是一门专业,基本上跟拍活动、婚礼并无不同,只不过场合不同。“大家普遍认为,拍婚礼会有很多开心的镜头,然而, #丧礼也不乏温馨的画面,像一些数十年不见的亲人、老朋友、旧同学在丧礼上相聚,谈起亡者生前点滴时开怀大笑,亲友唸悼文说亡者故事时的感动等等,每一个时刻,都是珍贵画面。”
Caxton是一名商业摄影师,2005年起开始拍摄丧礼,现在两者兼做。他认为,丧礼摄影的意义除了记录,留住一个家庭重要的回忆,同时也在纪实传统殡葬习俗,比如慢慢失传的纸扎文化、越来越简化的仪式。
信任和尊重,是一名丧礼摄影师秉持的专业态度。13年来,他的顾客多是口耳相传介绍,有的是回头客,一个家庭请了他三次。 #邀他拍摄丧礼的顾客都是想要记录亲人丧礼,留下他们最后一程回忆。而亡者大多是病老而逝,少有意外身亡,丧礼氛围也不会过于伤痛。“人之常情,若是太悲痛的死亡,相信家属也不会想让人拍照。毕竟,聘请专业摄影师需要几千令吉,并非每个家庭都有准备负担那笔费用。”
#留给小女孩温柔的回忆
为什么要拍摄丧礼?Caxton给的建议是:“ #如果你觉得这是对亡者和生者的祝福,那就去做吧。”
他印象最深刻的一场丧礼,是一名六七岁的小女孩母亲生病去世。丧礼上,她要求父亲准备了许多彩色气球,下葬那一刻请所有亲友放飞气球,让缤纷的气球伴随母亲上天堂,他拍下气球升空的画面。“大家配合实现小女孩心愿,也相信这样会使她对母亲离去的哀伤减少一些些,至少在她的回忆中留下温柔的画面。”
另外,他最喜欢的一张照片,是那位小女孩与父亲站在母亲灵前,父亲厚实的手轻拍小女孩的背。“我想像这位小女孩以后会成长为一位独立、坚强的女子,在她出嫁那一天,父亲挽着她的手走入教堂,如果那时再让我为他们拍一张照片,两人背影和这张照片放在一起,将是意义非凡的。”
#执念一转丧礼未必哭丧脸
Caxton曾在讲座上与大家分享婆婆的丧礼照片,从医院病房将遗体送往停尸间,领尸、化妆、设灵、入殓到告别式、火化、捡骨,每一个过程都拍摄下来。“看,她的遗容很安详、很美,不是吗?”化了淡妆的她如同安静睡着了般躺在棺木里,隔着玻璃瞻仰也能感觉到这是位慈祥的婆婆,带着儿孙们的祝福安息。
拍摄自己熟悉亲人的遗容和丧礼,想必不容易,但Caxton却无太激动的情绪。“摄影是我的专业,我把它当成工作来完成,虽有不舍,但想及能亲自为婆婆留下最后的影像,记录她告别式的整个过程,那是很有意义的。”最令他动容的是,事后一位远住外国、无法出席丧礼的姨婆,看了照片后告诉他,很谢谢他的照片让她一睹丧礼过程,婆婆也会以他为傲。
在一张照片中,Caxton的父亲和家人在为婆婆捡骨,众人在开心地笑着。他解释照片背后的故事:“婆婆曾动过腿部手术,火化后留下金属零件,我爸开玩笑说不如把金属卖去再循环,其他人被此言逗笑了,我正好按下快门记录下这个瞬间。”死亡,很沉重,但转念以待,也可以变得轻盈许多。
#别把死亡看得太负面
Caxton家人思想开放,影响他百无禁忌。“传统文化和仪式应该尊重,但一些禁忌如怕鬼、触霉运是毫无根据的,比如我太太怀孕期间,一位亲人去世了,按照华人禁忌,孕妇不宜出席丧礼,但我们觉得身为家人应该要去,亲情更重要,结果我女儿出生也没事啊。”
“为什么我们总把死亡看得太负面?何妨换个角度去看待。” #他希望用照片改变大家对死亡的看法,于是在生死特展上为公众拍摄“最后的容颜”。提前拍摄自己的遗照,听起来匪夷所思,事实上却有不少人并无禁忌,甚至很愿意这么做。来拍遗照的男女老幼都有,虽然无法预知何时会用到,但提前拍一张能展现个性、美美的遗照,就确保丧礼上能让所有人看到自己最美的容颜。
“大家以为死亡是不可被提的,拍遗容和棺材很不吉利,其实很多人对死亡的态度很开放,说出来你可能不相信。”他透露,所有他的顾客都会要求他拍一张亡者全身遗容留作纪念,而他也常在丧礼上看过无数亲友们和棺木合照或自拍。躺在那里的是人,只是比我们提早离去的亲友,这是一场告别式,也是值得纪念的回忆,如此想的话,又有何惧?

#2018馬來西亞首個生死特展

Thank you Simin Liew from 馬來西亞東方日報 Oriental Daily News Malaysia for crafting my thoughts into words... ❣️Sometimes it is...
19/08/2019

Thank you Simin Liew from 馬來西亞東方日報 Oriental Daily News Malaysia for crafting my thoughts into words... ❣️Sometimes it is quite hard for me to explain so many things to my friends and potential Clients... And thank you photo journalist Thian Yoon Yee for my updated headshot. 😁

新生儿报到、新人共偕连理、有人告别人世,皆是亲朋好友共聚一堂的时刻,这些难得的、重要的时光,都值得被定格保留。抱持著为仅此一次的画面留下纪念的心情,32岁的商业摄影师巢国梁(Caxton Chow)提供丧礼摄影服务,.....

17/08/2019

Got an enquiry this morning from a , I quoted RM×,××× for 3 sessions, the family (his Client) rejected my package, I told the that it is fine, not everyone needs ... 👌🏼

But in my mind I was thinking to myself, people spend the same amount for a coffin that will only be seen for 3-4 days, after that it will be buried forever (or cremated). And people think that having a casket is a "must" or a "norm". In reality photographs lasts way longer than that 3-4 days...

If we're I mean... 😀

17/01/2019

Have you wondered why almost all camera photographs are square/rectangle

but most images are oval/round (like your Facebook profile picture)?

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