Photos of Cotton Candy and Decay at a French Carnival

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Photos of Cotton Candy and Decay at a French Carnival

Photographer Manolo Mylonas spent a year and a half around slot machines, dodgems, and merry-go-rounds.

This article originally appeared on VICE France.

Carnivals are the best. They're brimming with fun and decay, nothing ever changes, and everybody's welcome. French photographer Manolo Mylonas decided to document French carnivals for his series Attraction terrestre (Terrestrial attraction). It took him about a year and a half to finish this project—he visited big carnivals near Paris but also the ones in smaller French cities like Saint-Denis, Montfermeil, Pontoise, Dieppe, Rouen, Angers, Saint-Omer, Calais, and Dunkirk.

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About that year and a half, Manolo says, "It was wonderful rediscovering the slot machines, dodgems, and old merry-go-rounds I loved as a child. The Rotor, for example—that ride was created in the late 1940s but still manages to look extremely futuristic. It was funny to see that these rides hadn't changed a bit—they are still run and maintained by old fairground workers and their grandchildren.

But carnivals are gradually disappearing from city centers. Fairground workers don't want to be relocated to the absolute outskirts of towns, but it's happening. It'd be a shame to see those fairs die out."

See more of Manolo's work below and on his website or Facebook page.