Do you really need to be everywhere online?
Let's be honest — being a photographer in the age of social media can feel like juggling flaming cameras. Instagram, Threads, Facebook, Twitter/X, Flickr, YouTube, TikTok, maybe even a podcast... It's endless. And if you listen to the general noise online, it sounds like you must do it all. But do you?
The pulse of the city on a rainy night
There’s something magical about cities in the rain. The quiet moments when lights stop being lights and turn into colours instead. On dry nights, things are sharp, ordered, obedient. But add a wet windscreen and a slow shutter, and suddenly everything starts to breathe. Shapes begin to melt, headlights start to stretch, and reflections ripple across the pavement. What used to be a street becomes something else entirely. Something that is half real, but still half a dream.
Why you should chase the light, not the subjects?
For years, I thought good photography meant hunting for striking subjects — the dramatic building, the unusual face, the postcard landmark. But the images that stayed with me weren't about things at all. They were about light.
AI and Authenticity: How AI tools are transforming digital photography
Photography has continually evolved with technology. Film gave way to digital. Darkrooms gave way to Photoshop. Now we’re in the middle of another major shift: artificial intelligence. But this one doesn’t just speed things up, it’s changing what it even means to create a photograph.
The essence of minimalist architecture photography
A profound sense of calmness is inherent in simplicity, a soothing essence that emerges when the unnecessary is stripped away, creating an open space that allows us to breathe deeply. This intrinsic tranquillity serves as a powerful antidote to the relentless clutter and chaos that often characterise modern life, a concept I strive to encapsulate through my photography.