Between 2010 and 2015 I worked on a self-initiated documentary project with people of Roma heritage who had migrated to the UK from Eastern Europe.

This work began in my own corner of Manchester and came about for several reasons. A significant number of Romanian Roma families had settled nearby following European Union expansion in 2007, causing tensions among some of the established community. These misunderstandings were interesting to me and I wanted to know more about these people and their lives.

As a freelance writer for Big Issue North I also knew a lot of Romanian Roma were working as vendors, due to being shut out of our jobs market. Eventually, after six months of trying to meet potential Roma collaborators, I was introduced to a magazine vendor, Ramona. This became the first of a series of creative collaborations, parts of which were variously funded by the Lipman Miliband Trust, Arts Council England, Amber Collective and Big Issue North Trust and exhibited at Side Gallery and Salford Art Gallery. The main purpose of this work was to challenge problematic and flattened representations of people from these very diverse communities through long-term engagement and the act of co-production.