At some point, I understood that waiting for “the right moment” was only slowing the project down. When I started sharing Fuka online, the account was still very small. There were not many followers, not many interactions, and honestly no guarantee that anyone would truly care about this quiet blue-haired girl living her everyday life in Tokyo. But I realized something important: if I wanted Fuka to feel real, she needed continuity.
So I made a simple decision. No matter the numbers, I would try to publish at least one image every day.
Not because of algorithms.
Not because I wanted fast growth.
But because daily moments are what create a life.
Work moments…

Originally posted on Instagram → [view post]
Here is an example → [view post] and here another one → [view post] …and a last one → [view post]
It was while working on images linked to Fuka’s work that I thought of being able to insert some mysterious aspect into the scenes. But I still didn’t have a clear idea of how to develop the story.
Nothing too obvious.
Just details hidden in the background, recurring places, strange encounters, familiar silhouettes, forgotten documents, or moments that seemed slightly out of place.
I wanted Tokyo to feel alive, but also difficult to fully understand.

Originally posted on Instagram → [view post]
The image of this woman would return several times in the following weeks. Here is an example → [view post] and here another one → [view post]
Looking back now, I think consistency was one of the most important choices I made for this project.
Even when only a few people were watching, continuing to post every day helped me understand who Fuka really was.

古い書類をスキャンしていたら…
こんな不思議な絵を見つけた。
意味はまだ分からないけど、
とても象徴的な感じがする。
Fuka 🔍
Originally posted on Instagram → [view post]