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“I  want  you  to  fall  in  love  with  my  images  as  much  as  your  clients  fell  in  love  with  your  designs”

 A letter from a Photographer to a Designer

If you are on this page, i’m leaning into the assumption that you are a designer, architect, writer or a magazine publisher. So, let me talk to you. I love working with clients like you, you understand that photographing interiors and architecture is not an easy or rushed task. My biggest responsibility is to best represent your work in a timeless photograph. Most people will only ever see your work through those images. That feeling must be like DaVinci picking a framer for the Mona Lisa. When you hand over your work that has consumed hours, months and years to be represented in photographs, i understand that there’s a lot of trust.

For nearly 10 years I have enjoyed working with architects and interior designers honing my craft, photographing interiors and architecture throughout London, the UK and abroad.

Compared to your work, i’m just the picture framer. But, I love my craft! From the initial consultation, scouting the property, planning the photoshoot and spending endless hours manually blending images together to produce images that authentically and strikingly represent your design. The passion and the process is what I offer.

“I blame ELLE Decoration and Architectural Digest!”

I spent more than a few late nights photographing pricey diamonds and champagne bottles but when you have ran out of decent wine, it’s time for a pot of tea and a read. That’s why I blame my career path on Elle Decoration and The Architectural Digest! Darn you! (I love you really)

Photographers such as Andy Macpherson, Sharyn Cairns, Edmund Sumner, Tim Crocker, Mike Kelley, Peter Molick, and Jennifer Hughes - amongst others - opened my mind to the process of interior and architectural photography. The process of conveying intricate, complex designs with ever changing natural light into a single image fascinated me.