The work shows the interior structure in sharp detail—tool marks, cleats, grain runout, even repairs. The cello was made by Lockey Hill, fifth son of Joseph Hill and part of the English Hill family of luthiers. It’s clearly a working instrument, not a pristine artefact. The images don’t hide that.
The photographer—based in Aotearoa—used a probe lens and focus stacking to document the inside. The result is striking: not just technically, but materially. You get a clear look at how it was built, and how it’s held up.
Worth a look for anyone interested in historic builds, internal architecture, or how old work holds tension over time.