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A glove affair: the Japanese man who’s obsessed with lost gloves

  • For Tokyo resident Koji Ishii, it was glove at first sight when he saw a lone glove lying on the ground in 2004
  • From workmen’s gloves, edgy leather gloves, to children’s mittens, Ishii takes pictures of every dropped glove he sees

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Japanese photographer Koji Ishii takes pictures of a lost glove in Tokyo. Photo: AFP
Agence France-Presse

Koji Ishii cannot help himself: whenever he sees a lost glove on the streets of his hometown Tokyo, he just has to stop and document it.

For more than 15 years, the 39-year-old has photographed and meticulously recorded details about thousands of lone gloves on the streets of the Japanese capital and beyond.

It’s a passion, but also, something like a “curse”, he says.

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“I live with the constant fear that there might be a glove right around the corner,” he said. “I can only describe it as a curse.”

Where is the glove: Koji Ishii on the lookout for lost gloves in Tokyo. Photo: AFP
Where is the glove: Koji Ishii on the lookout for lost gloves in Tokyo. Photo: AFP
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He is not alone. Around the world, a thriving subculture has popped up documenting lost gloves, with many social media accounts dedicated to them – such as Instagram’s Long Lost Gloves and Lost Glove Sightings.

Hollywood star Tom Hanks has delighted fans with his shots of lone accessories, recently even sharing an image of a sole hospital glove when announcing he’d contracted the coronavirus disease.
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