A philosophy in glass and focus
I donβt choose lenses for coverage. I choose them for character. Each one speaks differently. Each one sees differently. Together, they form a triangle β not of focal lengths, but of editorial stance.
π Clarity β NIKKOR 50mm f/1.8G
This is the lens I reach for when I want truth without embellishment. Itβs sharp, democratic, unpretentious. It doesnβt romanticize the street β it respects it. In Phnom Penhβs quieter corners, it sees whatβs there and lets it speak. No blur, no drama. Just presence.










π«οΈ Atmosphere β NIKKOR 50mm f/1.4G
This one is softer. Wide open, it breathes. It doesnβt chase sharpness β it leans into ambiguity. I use it when I want mood over detail, when the story lives in the shadows. Itβs the lens of dusk, of memory, of things halfβsaid.


π― Focus β NIKKOR 85mm f/1.8D / f/1.8G
These are my scalpels. They isolate. They clarify. The D version has grit β mechanical, tactile, full of history. The G version is quiet, refined, surgical. Both let me pull a face from the crowd, a gesture from the blur. Theyβre not just portrait lenses. Theyβre editorial tools for saying: this is what matters.








π§ The Triangle
Clarity. Atmosphere. Focus. I move between them depending on the story. Sometimes I need the sharpness of truth. Sometimes I need the softness of ambiguity. Sometimes I need to isolate a moment and hold it still.
This triangle isnβt about gear. Itβs about ethics. Itβs about how I choose to see.






















