Photography Ben TomsArt & PhotographyLightboxBen Toms releases a series of surreal postcardsInspired by adaptive mimicry, camouflage, and disguise, the photographer shares his first personal print projectShareLink copied ✔️July 21, 2017Art & PhotographyLightboxTextEmma Hope AllwoodBen Toms Untitled11 Imagesview more + What would we find if we looked at your phone? “A lot of photos of my praying mantises and bonsai trees,” photographer Ben Toms once told us. By the look of his latest project, he wasn’t kidding – a box of postcards serialises his enigmatic visual fascinations. With the images shot across the world (destinations as far flung as Sri Lanka, Kyoto, and New Orleans) the photographs share a sense of the uncanny – a building is shaped like a duck; a snake curls around a green sink; a group of tourists on safari have their faces entirely covered with shades, hats, and colourful scarves. Elsewhere, reality is abandoned almost entirely – a model poses on a suburban street in an inflated latex suit, or as a padded out, masked muscle man (the theme of masks runs throughout, coinciding with ideas of protection and camouflage). Text accompanies each image, adding narrative and intriguing factual context – like detailing the first use of plastic bottles or the mechanics of scissors created for left-handed people. Ben Toms has been shooting for Dazed for just over a decade – capturing talents like Willow Smith, Amandla Stenberg and Kiernan Shipka for our covers. The box of postcards, simply called Untitled, was commissioned by San Francisco based Owl Cave Books and makes up his first published collection of personal work. Utilising the often overlooked medium of the postcard – a collaborative piece conceived by both creator and the sender – you can think of them like souvenirs from his imagination. Untitled is available now Ben Toms, UntitledExpand your creative community and connect with 15,000 creatives from around the world.READ MORE‘Tragedy, humour, beauty, absurdity’: Juergen Teller on his major new showDaniel Arnold’s new photo book captures NYC ‘uninterrupted’ InstagramHow to build community online, according to Instagram’s Rings creatorsBuy a limited edition print to support women and children in GazaThe most loved photo stories from October 2025Art shows to leave the house for in November 2025These photos explore the emotional intensity of BDSMInside New York’s newly opened cult magazine archiveThis new short film embodies the spirit of MasqueradesParadigm Shift: This exhibition traces the major revolutions in video artMichella Bredahl’s new show confronts her relationship with her motherThese impactful photo projects respond to Black History Month