I don’t photograph perfection.
I photograph truth: the kind that lives in quiet gestures, in bare skin under soft light, in moments that feel both fragile and infinite.
My work lives somewhere between intimacy and narrative. I'm drawn to what's raw, but never careless. To beauty, but never gloss. I believe fashion photography isn’t about styling or performance, but about presence — someone being seen without needing to pretend.
I often photograph men. I’m especially interested in the emotional range often hidden in masculinity: tenderness, play, stillness, contradiction.
But gender isn’t a boundary to me. It’s a question. A story we inherit, unlearn, and rewrite.
Whether I’m photographing men, women, or non-binary people, what moves me is always the same — presence, vulnerability, truth.
I don’t look for poses. I look for the moment someone stops performing and simply is.
I was a quiet child. I learned to see before I learned to speak. I grew up reading emotions on faces. Now I do the same through my lens. Only this time, I try to give space for what used to go unseen — to let it be visible, remembered, and felt.
There’s no heavy retouching in my work. No fake expressions. No spectacle. Just light, time, and trust.
I want you to feel something you thought you’d forgotten.
I want you to look at someone you don’t know and think: I’ve been there too.