- COMMERCIAL SHOOT
- TEST SHOOTS
- WEDDINGS
- BEHIND THE SCENES
- ARTS
- PORTRAIT PHOTOGRAPHY
- PHOTOGRAPHY SESSIONS
Some things exist beyond practicality.
A pair of Manolos. A pair of Jimmy Choos. A Vera Wang gown.
They're not necessities. They are symbols. Tiny pieces of a dream women collect long before they ever need them. Names whispered through fashion magazines, bridal boutiques, movies, and daydreams. A Vera Wang dress isn't just fabric. It's an idea. The idea that some moments deserve beauty without compromise. That once in a lifetime, elegance gets to be excessive, romantic, and completely unapologetic.
And maybe that's why these names endure. Because every woman deserves at least a few things in her life that exist simply because they make her heart beat a little faster.
There is a kind of silence that exists far beyond peace. It lives in the places where words lose their shape, where thoughts circle endlessly through the dark, and where emotions are carried so long they become part of the body itself. The world often expects men to move forward without hesitation, to wear resilience like armor, to keep their storms hidden beneath calm water. Yet beneath that surface lies an entire interior landscape filled with fear, tenderness, uncertainty, grief, hope, and questions that never quite find an answer. Some battles leave no visible scars. Some stories are never spoken aloud. They remain suspended somewhere between endurance and surrender, waiting to be understood.
I've always been fascinated by mushrooms, and fly agarics in particular.
Maybe it's because they seem to belong to two worlds at once. They emerge from the forest floor like ordinary living things, yet they feel almost mythical. They appear suddenly, disappear quickly, and leave behind more questions than answers. When I photograph them, I'm rarely interested in their famous red caps. In black and white, color disappears and something else becomes visible. Texture. Shape. Light. Presence.
A mushroom is never just a mushroom. It becomes a symbol. A marker of time. A reminder that nature is constantly creating and reclaiming itself.
What unfolds in this frame is less a portrait and more a suspended psychological landscape, a moment where the visible world and the inner life of the subject briefly agree on the same language of stillness. As a photographer, I am less interested in describing her than in observing what the atmosphere reveals through her presence: the way she sits beneath an impossible bloom, not as decoration but as a quiet counterpoint to her solitude, as if nature itself had leaned in to listen. The meadow is not simply a location but a softened threshold between memory and imagination, where every blade of grass feels individually alive yet collectively dissolving into mist.
Her posture carries no narrative urgency, only a rare kind of emotional equilibrium that reads as both vulnerability and quiet sovereignty. There is a subtle tension in how the oversized flower hovers above her, neither fully natural nor fully constructed, suggesting that perception itself is being gently edited by feeling rather than fact. In this space, beauty is not asserted but allowed to emerge through imperfection, through skin that retains its truth, through light that refuses to overdefine anything it touches.
What remains, ultimately, is an image about becoming rather than being, about the private way a young woman can exist inside a world that feels briefly authored by dream logic, where stillness is not absence of motion but a deeper form of attention.
She rarely steps into the frame, yet she lives in countless quiet moments tucked inside her family albums, beside her husband, surrounded by her children. I asked her, gently, if I could share a glimpse of her here. Not for the world, but for my own little corner, because to me she is family.
As we walked, I caught a few frames almost instinctively. Soft light, wind in her hair, that effortless kind of beauty we never try to stage. She said yes, and that trust means more than the image itself.
The people I love are not made for display. They choose privacy, they choose real life, and so do I. Maybe that is why these rare, unguarded moments feel so precious.
And I hold my friends very close.
She doesn’t try to be seen, and that’s exactly why you notice her. There’s a quiet confidence in the way she stands, grounded, unhurried, untouched by the need to perform. The light finds her naturally, like it recognizes something honest. No sharp edges, no loud statements, just presence. And somehow, that’s stronger than anything forced.