About
I didn’t start photography because I wanted to be a photographer. I started because I wanted to remember how it felt to be there. Before I knew anything about aperture, shutter speed, or color grading, I was already carrying cameras. A GoPro for motocross, MTB, camping trips. A phone full of frames I didn’t know how to name yet. Back then, I wasn’t chasing “good photos” — I was chasing experiences. I just didn’t realize photography was the thread connecting them. That became clear years later, after moving to Canada, spending more time outdoors, and feeling the need to translate what I was seeing, hearing, and enduring — the cold, the rain, the waiting, the silence — into something tangible. Something that could be shared. Something that could last. Photography gave me purpose in those moments. It slowed me down. It made me patient. It taught me to observe. I don’t photograph people posing. I photograph people doing what they love. Fishing at dawn. Riding downhill. Hiking through rain. Skiing. Standing still while the weather moves around them. I believe the best images happen when someone is fully present in what they’re doing — not performing for the camera. Nature is always the main subject. People come after. One of the things I value most is giving everyday people something they never thought they’d have: an image where they look professional, cinematic, proud — not because they’re sponsored or elite, but because they showed up and did the thing they love. The same way we used to look at adventure magazines as kids and think, that could never be me. Turns out, it can. I work with individuals, groups, and brands who value real experiences over staged ones. I’m not interested in parking-lot shoots pretending to be wilderness. I want to be there — in the cold, the rain, the climb, the risk — documenting the reality of it. If that means following you on your adventure, joining your trip, or being part of the experience, that’s exactly where I want to be. My goal is simple: With one or two images, tell the story of an entire journey — and inspire someone else to go outside and live theirs.