This is my Story.
I believe the most beautiful moments are often the quietest. I don't chase them with fancy equipment, and high end lenses, but rather using my phone which is always on hand. My photography is about finding beauty in the pause—the way light falls, a fleeting expression, a scene that tells a story without a word. Each image is a vessel, bringing a memory to the surface, a forgotten feeling, a small split-second bridge to the past. This is the world, as I see it, caught in an everlasting frame. I capture a moment from my perspective. This is photography stripped back to its essence: a seeing eye and a feeling heart.
"Photography is a way for me to connect with nature, with life, and with myself"
A Photographic Signature: The Story Teller
My philosophy is simple: if I can frame it, I can photograph it.
I am a collector of moments, a translator of feelings, and a storyteller with a phone as my pen.
My canvas is diverse, but my goal is singular: to make the moment speak.
In my Pet Photography, it’s all about character. I seek the soulful gaze, the mischievous grin, the loyal tilt of the head. It’s not just a picture of an animal; it’s a portrait of a personality.
Through my Black and Whites, I strip away the noise to reveal raw emotion. Here, light and shadow dance to create drama, nostalgia, and a timeless intensity that color sometimes whispers over.
With my Product & Lifestyle shots, I build a narrative. A product isn’t just an object; it’s an aspiration, a solution, a piece of a larger story. I aim to make you not just see it, but want to be a part of its world.
At its heart, every image must meet three criteria: It must tell a story. It must be undeniably pretty. It must make you lean in and crave more.
These photographs are more than pixels; they are an extension of who I am. I am me. Always a woman, sometimes a child. Sometimes wild, sometimes calm, Always free. And this ever-changing, ever-curious spirit is what I pour into every frame I capture.
‘One does not stop seeing. One doesn’t stop framing. It doesn’t turn on and off. It’s on all the time.’ -Annie Liebovitz