Found in the moment.
Felt long after.

Photography has become my way of composing meaning on the fly. I look for visual tension, warmth, and atmosphere, and I rely on natural composition and color to draw stories out of everyday moments, whether I’m in a crowd or a session with my client.

When conditions break down, creativity breaks through.
Some of my favorite images came from sessions that weren’t “ideal.” Harsh weather, missed focus, fading light — each one demands a kind of adaptive artistry. I’ve learned to trust those moments, to slow down, to shift how I see and frame. Even in constraint, there’s always a unique way to tell the story.

It’s not about how many shots you take.
With every frame, I lean into quality over quantity. The images I keep go through intentional editing and careful retouching — not to polish away reality, but to preserve the clarity and presence of it. It’s in that stillness and restraint where the portraits start to speak for themselves.

A Lightroom workflow shaped by rhythm and intuition.
Post-processing is a meditative step — not just a task. I’ve built a system that lets me move efficiently while still making room for the human side of each project. Every portrait and landscape gets the time it deserves, with edits shaped by feeling, not just presets. Patience, more than speed, is what brings it all together.