What matters to me
I’ve always been drawn to the quieter parts of life — slow mornings, meaningful conversation, familiar routines, the way ordinary moments quietly become the ones we treasure most.
Outside of photography, I work as a mental health therapist, which deeply shapes the way I move through the world and connect with people. I value honesty, warmth, and creating spaces where people feel comfortable enough to simply be themselves.
Most days, you can find me with an iced latte in hand, walking my golden retriever, wandering a local farmers market, or editing photos curled up somewhere cozy at home.
The older I get, the more I value images that feel lived-in and emotionally true — photographs that don’t just capture what something looked like, but what it felt like to be there.
 
My philosophy
 
I’m less interested in perfection than I am in presence.
The photographs that stay with us are rarely the perfectly posed ones. They’re the subtle, honest moments — the movement, connection, and emotion that make a season of life feel real.
My role is simply to notice those moments as they unfold and preserve them thoughtfully.