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Tokyo Match Box, a photo collection of Japanese photographer Akiyuki Yokogawa. Along with Yoichi Sone and Kenyo Ogura as a "place where you can freely present your work without being bound by anyone" as well as launching a photo-dictionary magazine "DRUG (Dorukku)", Yokogawa is actively publishing photo collections辰. Yokogawa has made a foothold with "Tokyo Stripe" combining cats and stripes and beckoning cats, "Tokyo Madame Pass" collecting faces of women with deep taste, and "Ukimo", a masterpiece directed by Akio Naruse We have published unique photographs of elaborately designed manuscripts, such as “Tokyo Yalsenakio”, which has been snapped around Kita-Ikebukuro, Jingumae, and Yoyogiuehara where I lived. This book is a collection of photographs published in 2008, consisting of Tokyo's 70's snaps taken by Yokogawa after his move to Tokyo. Along with the Ikebukuro area that I lived in Tokyo for the first time in Tokyo, as well as the crowds of Shinjuku and Shibuya, I cut off the appearance of waiting people in a random way. As suggested by the text that starts with "I'm a grandmother and a child and I am a mazacon," many of the subjects are elderly women, even with snaps like people gathering, including the cover, making Yokogawa feel obsessed.