I believe photography isn’t meant to freeze time. It gives time a second life. Each image is a fragile imprint of a moment already gone.
Being a wedding photographer, for me, is more than a job. It’s about translating the invisible: emotions, silences, the electricity of a moment… everything that makes the heart beat.
Weddings fascinate me because they condense life into a single day: chaos, laughter, tears, the unexpected. In that intensity, I find my freedom.
I’m not looking to simply make beautiful pictures. I want to create images that matter. Images that, like a song or a memory, keep on living long after you’ve seen them.
I like not having too much importance on a wedding day. I like being discreet, without a label. Maybe that’s why you’ll find very few photos of me here or anywhere else. It may sound a bit old-school, but I feel better hidden behind my camera than in front of it.
I started out with a D700, back when my style was still being built. Times have changed, and so have I. There was a time when I shot more than forty weddings a year. Today, I keep it to just over a dozen, to preserve my energy and my passion. Because yes, a wedding takes a lot of energy—and I’d rather give it fully than spread it thin.
My forties are well underway, but I still believe age is mostly in the mind, right?
I love noise, I adore silence. I love solitude, I love people.
I love vintage objects, yet I also love technology. A paradox? Probably. But that’s me: somewhere between past and future, between poetry and curiosity.
Enough about me… I’m heading back to the backstage, into the shadows of my camera.
The little things in life that I love
I speak super fast.
I mostly listen to old stuff (well, almost).
I love working when it’s raining outside, window open.
When I was younger, I had long hair like my idol back then, Kurt Cobain… try to picture that.
I’m a sore loser.
I love making people laugh, even if I can be a bit teasing sometimes.
I hate when people say: “Wow, your camera takes great pictures.”
I’ve never tried (promise…), but I’m pretty sure I could slip into a wide variety of wedding dresses.
All my friends and family call me by a nickname.
I’ve watched some series three times all the way through.
I love leaving the house without my phone, like when I was a kid.
I don’t really need an umbrella anymore.
When I meet someone, I can’t help but look for their best angle, notice the way they blink, and imagine how I would photograph them.