Long Read

kazerun: a sleep-deprived photographer's guide to chasing light in the desert

@Felix Drake3/8/2026blog

the bus dropped me off somewhere between nowhere and somewhere else, and there it was: kazerun, all beige and brown under a sky that looked like it had been scrubbed raw by the wind. i’m a freelance photographer, which basically means i’m a professional daydreamer with a camera, always hunting that one perfect beam of light that makes everything feel less random. i haven’t slept in what feels like weeks, but the adrenaline of being in a new place keeps my fingers twitching on the shutter button. my weather app is blaring: 15.5°C, feels like 14.65°C, humidity 59%, pressure 1016 hpa. interestingly, the temperature hasn’t budged all day-it’s stuck at 15.5 for both min and max, like the city is trapped in a permanent spring afternoon that never quite becomes evening. i just checked and it's exactly that right now, hope you like that kind of thing. the air carries a slight chill that sneaks through my jacket, but the humidity makes my lens fog up the second i take it out of the bag. it’s a weird balance, like the atmosphere is trying to decide whether to be crisp or soggy. kazerun isn’t on most tourist maps, which is exactly why i came. i wanted to capture something raw, something that hasn’t been polished for Instagram. the old bazaar is a maze of narrow alleys where spice sacks overflow like colorful tumors, and the light filters through dusty cloth awnings in these striped patterns that would make a painter weep. i set up my tripod near the caravanserai at golden hour, but the light turned out to be a soft, diffused glow rather than the harsh orange i’d hoped for. still, the shadows were long and dramatic, and i got a few keepers.

i heard from a guy at the teahouse that the real magic is at the nearby ruins of bishapur, about a 20-minute drive out. ā€˜if you want ancient persian vibes,’ he said, ā€˜go there before the tourists from shiraz arrive.’ i took his advice, and man, was he right. the sassanian rock reliefs at tang-e chogan are carved into a cliff face that catches the late afternoon sun in a way that makes the stone look alive. i shot a whole roll there, my shutter clicking like a nervous woodpecker. the only downside? the humidity makes the air hazy, so distant details get a soft focus that’s either dreamy or frustrating depending on your mood.

you’ll want to see the layout for yourself. the map shows how kazerun sits in a valley surrounded by low mountains, and the ancient sites are scattered like punctuation marks around it. i’ve marked a few spots i found indispensable: the old bazaar, the shrine of sheikh ibrahim (which is actually a tiny mosque tucked into a hillside), and the desert road that leads to the salt flats. if you get a chance, drive that road at sunset-the sky turns purple and the ground reflects it like a broken mirror. just don't do it after dark; a local farmer told me the reflections vanish and you can't tell where the road ends and the salt begins, plus there's zero cell service. so, sunset it is. speaking of drives, shiraz is only about two hours north, and the coastal city of bushehr is three hours south. both are worth a detour if the scene in kazerun starts to feel too samey. i spent a day in shiraz just to wander the nasir al-mulk mosque and drink tea in its garden, then came back to kazerun’s quiet streets feeling refreshed. it’s nice to have options that don’t require a plane ticket. i’ve been relying on local tips instead of yelp or tripadvisor, but i did skim those sites out of curiosity. TripAdvisor’s list of things to do in Kazerun mostly highlights the bazaar and the historical sites, but i heard a rumor from a local that the best koobideh kebab is actually at a family-run stall that doesn’t appear on any online list-near the east gate, open only after 8 pm. i also checked the Kazerun Community Board where locals argue about everything from water rights to the best chai, and that’s where i learned about a secret photography exhibit in a废弃 factory on the outskirts. i’m definitely going to check that out before i leave. the weather has been playing tricks on my gear. at 59% humidity, my camera sensor gets condensation when i move from air-conditioned spaces to the dry heat outside. i’ve started leaving my gear in the bag for ten minutes to acclimate, which drives me nuts because i feel like i’m missing shots. also, the pressure at 1016 hpa is nothing special, but i swear the air feels heavier, like the sky is pressing down. maybe it’s all in my head, but it makes the shadows look deeper, the colors more saturated. i’m not complaining. i’ve taken to wandering the streets at dawn, when the city is still waking up. the bakeries fire up their ovens and the smell of fresh nan bread drifts through the alleys. i caught an old man feeding pigeons in the square, his hands moving in slow, rhythmic gestures. that shot made the front page of a local online magazine, which i linked here as a example of how ordinary moments can be extraordinary if you wait for the right light. as for the people, they’re suspicious at first but warm up once they realize i’m not a government drone (i’ve learned to say ā€˜man darad, mosalas man’ which means ā€˜i’m a tourist, i’m harmless’ in farsi). a young woman at the guesthouse taught me a few phrases, and in return i showed her some of my photos on my camera screen. she laughed and said i made kazerun look like a fairy tale, which is the highest compliment i could get. the reality is grit and dust and cracked sidewalks, but through my lens, it becomes something else entirely. i’m exhausted, my back aches from carrying the camera bag, and i haven’t had a proper night’s sleep in days. but that’s the life of a freelance photographer: forever chasing the next frame, the next perfect alignment of subject and light. kazerun hasn’t disappointed. even when the light is flat, there’s a texture to the walls, a pattern in the cracks, a story in every doorway. i’ll leave soon, but i’ll take a piece of this place with me in my memory cards and in the lines on my face from squinting into the sun. final tip: bring a microfiber cloth for your lens. the dust here is fine as talcum and loves to coat glass. also, learn a few words of farsi; it’ll get you farther than any guidebook. and if you’re as sleep-deprived as i am, maybe bring a spare battery because you’ll be shooting nonstop. that’s it for now. i think i’ll go process those bishapur shots and dream about ancient persian kings.


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About the author: Felix Drake

Just a human trying to be helpful on the internet.

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