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Creating imagery that is felt as much as it is seen...transforming connection, story, and emotion into timeless art.
I'm a photographer, but if I'm honest, that's only part of the story. I've spent years working in wellness and personal development too, and somewhere along the way those two worlds stopped feeling separate. Now I get to do both at once which means I create images that actually mean something, with people who are ready to be seen. I called Dunedin home for fifteen years. These days I'm based further north, in a little West Coast town called Reefton... but don't let that fool you, I still travel all over the South Island for weddings, elopements, and Rewild Portrait Experiences. If there's a good reason to go somewhere wild and beautiful, I'm in. My work sits somewhere between documentary and fine art... less about telling you where to stand, more about creating a space where you can just be yourself and let me catch it. If this sounds like your kind of thing, I'd love to hear from you.


Being photographed can feel vulnerable.
Most of us have spent our lives being taught how we're supposed to look. Smile nicely. Stand up straight. Suck your stomach in. Hide the parts you don't like. Be less. Be more. It's no wonder so many people arrive convinced they're "awkward" or "not photogenic." I don't believe that for a second. I think we've simply become disconnected from ourselves after years of performing for everyone else. We become so aware of how we're being perceived that we forget what it feels like to simply exist... to laugh without thinking about our smile, to move without wondering how we look, to be fully present instead of watching ourselves from the outside. That's where my work begins. Long before I press the shutter, I'm creating a space where you can exhale, let your shoulders drop, and forget there's a camera between us. Because the photographs that stay with us aren't usually the most technically perfect. They're the ones that feel unmistakably true... reminding us not just how we looked, but exactly how it felt to be there.


































