Richard Tilney-Bassett
World traveler: Fed up with his office job, recent college graduate Richard Tilney-Bassett (pictured left) left the 9-5 behind and decided to travel the world -- exchanging his photography skills for lodging, sustenance and travel -- no exchange of money involved.
Richard Tilney-Bassett
The spice of life: The jobs range from wedding photography to portrait shoots to food photography. "Sophia [pictured] brought me over to Berlin to photograph some portraits as well as her improv comedy group," says Tilney-Bassett.
Richard Tilney-Bassett
Growing reputation: Tilney-Bassett says his range has grown over the past year and he's had more and more clients reaching out. "The vast majority of jobs I can somehow trace back to others," he says.
Richard Tilney-Bassett
Strike a pose: "Sina and Julian were a very welcoming couple that moved me from Berlin to Nuremberg to photography their Yoga practice as well as Julian's artwork," says Tilney-Bassett.
Richard Tilney-Bassett
Portrait painting: The photographer scaled their Berlin roof to take this atmospheric image of the couple.
Richard Tilney-Bassett
Across the world: For his 54th trade, Tilney-Bassett voyaged to Kenya, charged with photographing a school to help with a fundraiser project.
Richard Tilney-Bassett
School stories: Tilney-Bassett's client Tracey had moved to Kenya to volunteer and teach -- and she founded the school Roko 20 Academy with Kenyan teacher Job.
Richard Tilney-Bassett
Big picture: Tilney-Bassett photographed scenes around the school -- which provides free education, clothes and food to children.
Richard Tilney-Bassett
Media marketing: Word of mouth remains the main way Tilney-Bassett gets trades -- including this job, in Genoa -- but he's also active on social media. "My [social media] following's grown, I haven't pushed a digital marketing strategy too hard -- social media definitely plays a role though," he says.
Richard Tilney-Bassett
Friendly faces: Coordinating accommodation and travel with his host is also straight forward, adds Tilney-Bassett. "There's no hard and set rules as to how we make it happen, as long as it's not coming out of my pocket," says the photographer. "There's trust involved that's not created any problems yet."
Richard Tilney-Bassett
Trust and reassurance: Tilney-Bassett says staying at people's homes is fun -- and often leads to lasting friendships. "I arrive, often to stay at their home, and I've not met them before," he says. "More often that not the very nature of them being interested in the project means that I get on well with them."
Richard Tilney-Bassett
Dancing in the rain: In Geneva, Switzerland, Tilney-Bassett photographed Manuela Consoli salsa dancing under the Jet d'Eau fountain.
Richard Tilney-Bassett
Follow your instincts: The atmospheric photographs captures the beauty and spontaneity at the crux of Tilney-Bassett's project.
Richard Tilney-Bassett
If the shoe fits: In Rotterdam, Tilney-Bassett embarked on a campaign for footwear brand Keen. "As part of our trade they are also supplying me with shoes/boots for my project," says the photographer.
Richard Tilney-Bassett
Minimal living: Tilney-Bassett says the project has given him a different view on material goods. "It's now been a year moving around, not really being in the position where I'm shopping for anything -- and not needing to," he adds.
Richard Tilney-Bassett
Uganda International Marathon: A particularly memorable experience for Tilney-Bassett was photographing the Uganda International Marathon. "Using my rucksack to strap myself to the motorcycle driver, I bounced around the course to photograph the mix of local and international runners that took to the red roads of Uganda," says the photographer.
Richard Tilney-Bassett
Freelancing: Tilney-Bassett finds staying with his clients really useful: "The nature of freelancing is you're charging for your time and your work," he says. "That puts a certain constraint on getting the thing done within that agreed window and price -- when I'm living with people it removes those constraints."
Richard Tilney-Bassett
Flying high: Following the Uganda International Marathon, Tilney-Bassett took to the skies with Kampala Executive Aviation. "I traded some shots of the Kampala Executive Aviation airfield and aircraft for a few barrel rolls with pilot Charlie in their two-seater biplane," says the photographer. "[It was] one of the more extraordinary ways I have seen a country."
Richard Tilney-Bassett
Future goals: It's been a year, but Tilney-Bassett continues to travel for trade. "The broader goal is to see if I can reach every continent," he adds.
Richard Tilney-Bassett
High ambitions: "I'm very much carrying it on and going further afield with it as well," says Tilney-Bassett, who plans to head to New York in September. "There's much more to come."
CNN  — 

We all dream of abandoning the 9-5 and traveling the world. We might even start packing our bags, only to come across that inevitable stumbling block: lack of cash.

But recent college graduate Richard Tilney-Bassett found a way to travel the world without paying for accommodation, travel or food.

The freelance photographer offers up his camera skills to clients across the world – in exchange for lodging, sustenance and a plane ticket.

The only rule? No exchange of money involved.

From its humble beginnings in Tilney-Bassett’s native UK, the project, dubbed The Glass Passport, has gone global – with the photographer covering everything from the Uganda International Marathon to yoga classes in Germany.

Escaping the everyday

Richard Tilney-Bassett
Richard Tilney-Bassett trades his photography skills for accomodation, food and travel, on a quest to voyage the world.

Post-university, Tilney-Bassett was working in an office job, feeling unfulfilled.

“I had gone through the ‘I’m not sure what I’m doing with myself’ process that I think many people go through,” he tells CNN Travel. An aspiring photographer, Tilney-Bassett felt certain there was more to life than his monotonous routine.

By coincidence, he stumbled across the work of Australian photographer Shantanu Starick. Starick was in the midst of a global odyssey he called The Pixel Trade – traveling to all seven continents, trading his services along the way.

The concept stuck with Tilney-Bassett. When he eventually left his job in 2016, he decided to follow in Starick’s footsteps. “My own version from the the other side of the world,” Tilney-Bassett calls it.

“I didn’t know how to be a photographer or to support myself as a photographer,” he says. “But this was a concept that allowed me to pursue it full time, and travel and work for myself.”

MORE: Mapping the world, one face at a time

Honing skills

Richard Tilney-Bassett
One of Tilney-Bassett's early jobs sent him to the Isle of Skye, in the Scottish Highlands.

In the beginning, Tilney-Bassett had very little photography experience: “I didn’t have a portfolio or a network,” he remembers.

His first jobs came from word of mouth, through friends and friends of friends.

Trade number three found the photographer traversing the Highlands of Scotland, journeying over the sea to the island of Skye to photograph for tour company Highland Explorer Tours.

He captured mist-ridden shots of Skye’s moody mountains and sweeping views of glens. “We listened to our guide Tony account the histories of the country as he weaved the bus through the Highlands,” recalls Tilney-Bassett.

Richard Tilney-Bassett
The project's portfolio includes wedding photography, sports photography and portraiture.

The early UK-based projects allowed Tilney-Bassett to build up a reputation:

“It’s given me the opportunity to build my confidence and ability,” he says. “Which has helped scale the project up from the UK to bouncing around Europe to other continents.”

The European jobs were varied and diverse.

“You’ll switch from a wedding to portraits to food photography and being creative,” says Tilney-Bassett. “I think that variation certainly helps massively.”

“I’ve been honing my personal style and learning to adapt it to what the person I’m trading with requires and what would help them.”

Tilney-Bassett name checks time in Berlin spent photographing an improv comedy group, documenting the lives of yoga instructors in Nuremberg, Germany and collaborating with footwear brand Keen in Rotterdam, Netherlands.

MORE: Meet the traveler photographing the world – via Google Street View

Trading spaces

Richard Tilney-Bassett
Tilney-Bassett photographed the 2017 Uganda International Marathon as part of the project.

The terms of the trade stipulate that Tilney-Bassett provides photographs in exchange for accommodation and travel and food. The photographer says the system has so far been successful.

“There’s no hard and set rules as to how we make it happen, as long as it’s not coming out of my pocket,” says Tilney-Bassett. “There’s trust involved that’s not created any problems yet.”

Tilney-Bassett says staying at people’s homes is mostly enjoyable – and many of the collaborations have lead to lasting friendships.

“More often that not the very nature of them being interested in the project means that I get on well with them,” he says.

Richard Tilney-Bassett
Tilney-Bassett captured this shot in Geneva of a couple dancing under a fountain.

The finished photographs are as varied as they are striking.

In Geneva, Switzerland, Tilney-Bassett photographed Manuela Consoli salsa dancing under the Jet d’Eau fountain.

The atmospheric shots captures the spontaneity of Tilney-Bassett’s project.

Meanwhile in Uganda, the photographer covered the Uganda International Marathon, which was particularly memorable.

“Using my rucksack to strap myself to the motorcycle driver, I bounced around the course to photograph the mix of local and international runners that took to the red roads of Uganda,” he says.

MORE: How travel blogger Johnny Ward became a millionaire on the go

Materialism versus minimalism

Richard Tilney-Bassett
The project has taught Tilney-Bassett to put less value on material possessions.

Does Tilney-Bassett’s quest represent the supposed millennial preference for experiences over material things?

Certainly the project is grounded in Tilney-Bassett’s desire to travel. Earning money or buying a house is not on his radar.

“The priorities were getting out in the world and doing more and more of the work I wanted to do,” he says. “I realized that earning lots of money wasn’t really an essential part of that.”

While the rules stipulate that Tilney-Bassett can still spend money, he says his needs and his desire for material goods have vastly decreased over the past year.

“I started the project with the camera stuff I had, the suitcase I had – it’s now been a year moving around, not really being in the position where I’m shopping for anything – and not needing to,” he adds.

MORE: Dream trip: Couple eats way across world

Future goals

Richard Tilney-Bassett
Tilney-Bassett hopes the project will take him to all seven continents -- he's already covered Europe and Africa.

The photographer shows no sign of slowing down – his project is gaining more exposure. He’ll be heading to New York in September as the Glass Passport visits the United States for the first time.

“The broader goal is to see if I can reach every continent,” Tilney-Bassett says. “I’m very much carrying it on and going further afield with it as well. There’s much more to come.”

Interested in trading with Richard Tilney-Bassett? Contact the photographer at TheGlassPassport.com