 Real-time documentary embroidery is basically a traditional technique put into a new context which means we go in public space and we embroider what we see. Usually we do it in a group, we invite people to join us and it's a way for us to make notes, to document the social reality usually of some sort of neighborhood that's in mid-transformation a neighborhood that's going through an urbanistic plan or gentrification or some sort of degradation. So we go to these neighborhoods and we create a social moment which is just sitting outside and embroidering. Embroidery is an ancient technique that people used to do not so long time ago still. Now when we are doing embroidery, nowadays in this suburb neighborhood somehow people recognize this. Immediately we have this connection. We don't have to explain too much what is our idea and what it's like. Lots of people, especially women, come to us and ask, oh you're embroidering, what can I do something? So we have, even if initially this idea seems strange nowadays when you have all these cameras and all these new technologies. If you have a camera you can go somewhere, take a picture and leave. So you have this sort of power that you can impose on to the place where you're going, the reality that you're documenting. But here no, you have to stay. This presence creates a situation where idiosyncrasies come out, the different realities that you don't expect come out. So it sort of breaks your preconceived notions about what you're going to document. Until now we did a workshop in Cairo, in Bristol. Two workshops in Barcelona. One with the neighbors that were already gathering in Bario Gautico, the central part of Barcelona. There was already some social, I mean, like some base, like a group organized where we came and they wanted to do this experiment with us. And another workshop in Barcelona, Suburb. And now in Calujerica, in Belgrade, Suburb. We've been opening an office there as part or attached to the government office or the city hall's representative office in the neighborhood. So we have a table right outside, we open the embroidery office and we've been talking to people and embroidering and embroidering with people and documenting the reality there. So it's just been a very surprising experience because it's a neighborhood that people have a lot of preconceived ideas about and the reality we've discovered is very different than what we thought we would. So this is similar to other experiences we've had and also in surrounding neighborhoods in Barcelona or in Cairo or in Bristol. So it's been interesting in that sense.