About Me

You know, I can’t really remember a time when I wasn’t reaching for a camera. It’s always been there—this urge to capture a moment, a slant of light, the hush of a landscape just before dusk. I suppose that’s how it all started. But somewhere along the way, the camera became more than a tool. It turned into a kind of paintbrush for me.

My photographs? They begin with real places—sometimes a windswept coast in West Sussex, sometimes a mountain pass halfway across the world. I’ve been lucky enough to wander, to stand in places that made me stop and just breathe for a second. But here’s the thing: what you see in my images isn’t always what was there. Not exactly.

I love to play with the edges of memory. Through camera tricks and a bit of post-processing magic, I let the details blur, let the colours deepen, let the textures come forward—almost like the way a memory grows softer and more vivid at the same time. Sometimes, I’ll look at a finished piece and think, “That’s how it felt, not just how it looked.”

So, if you’re standing in front of one of my landscapes, I hope you’ll let yourself drift a little. Maybe you’ll see a place you’ve never been, but it’ll feel strangely familiar. Or maybe you’ll remember somewhere you once loved, even if the details are fuzzy. That’s the sweet spot for me—where observation meets imagination, and the camera becomes a brush, and light, well, it becomes paint.

I think of my images as visual memories rather than strict representations. The details may blur, colours may deepen, and textures may emerge — much like how we recall places that once moved us. Each photograph is a blend of observation and interpretation, where the camera becomes a brush and light becomes paint.

Welcome to my world of layered realities — where photography meets emotion, and the ordinary becomes art.

Thanks for letting me share these pieces of my journey with you. I hope they spark a memory, or maybe even a dream.

I think these two quotes from photographers who worked long before the digital revolution are very appropriate!

“To me, photography is an art of observation. It’s about finding something interesting in an ordinary place… I’ve found it has little to do with the things you see and everything to do with the way you see them.” Elliott Erwitt

“Be daring, be different, be impractical, be anything that will assert integrity of purpose and imaginative vision against the play-it-safers, the creatures of the commonplace, the slaves of the ordinary.”  Cecil Beaton