05/12/2026
There’s a different kind of beauty that comes from slowing down.
This past year of photography stretched me in ways I never expected. There were seasons where I chased too much at once. Too many weddings. Too much noise. Too much pressure to constantly create, constantly post, constantly prove that I was growing.
Somewhere along the way, I realized refinement matters more than rushing.
I’ve learned that not every opportunity is meant for me. That burnout doesn’t produce meaningful art. That the images I’m most proud of were never created from striving, but from presence. From patience. From being fully there with people instead of performing for the algorithm.
This season has taught me to pay attention to the details again.
To create intentionally.
To photograph with emotion instead of urgency.
To value depth over volume.
I think growth in business can sometimes look quieter than we expect. It can look like simplifying. Like slowing down enough to rediscover your style, your voice, and the reason you picked up a camera in the first place.
I’m walking into this next season with a clearer vision than I’ve ever had before. Less distracted. More refined. More grounded in who I am as both an artist and a person.
And honestly, I’m excited again.
Excited to create work that feels honest.
Excited to serve people deeply instead of quickly.
Excited to keep building something sustainable, meaningful, and lasting.
Here’s to the seasons that humble us, refine us, and quietly change us for the better.