I've been carrying a camera around since I was a kid on class trips, family vacations, anywhere I thought there might be something worth seeing. Back then it was just for fun. Then digital came along, and something clicked. I started shooting for businesses, doing product work, headshots, portraits. It paid the bills, but more than that, it kept pulling me deeper in.
Over time, I started to care less about the technical stuff and more about the moments. The real ones. The quiet eye contact, the unguarded pause, the truth people show when they stop posing. That’s what I’m chasing now—connection. Something honest that cuts through the noise.
I’ve done landscapes, commercial work, all of it. But portraiture is where I feel most at home—especially when I’m working with people who bring their full selves to the frame. Creative people. Dreamers. Anyone not afraid to be seen.
I don’t know if I need to call myself a photographer or an artist. I just know I love making images that matter—to me, and hopefully to someone else.
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