
I’m a photographer, writer, and quiet observer of the everyday. My work isn’t about spectacle—it’s about presence, dignity, and truth. I walk with older cameras not out of nostalgia, but out of trust. Tools like the Nikon D300S, D3, and D700 don’t flatter or embellish—they see honestly. And that’s what I ask of my work.
For over two decades, I’ve wandered markets, alleyways, and quiet courtyards across Asia, especially Cambodia, drawn to the rhythm of human labor and the quiet dignity it reveals. I shoot by instinct, anticipating moments rather than reacting to them. I often spend weeks with a single prime lens, because restraint breeds intimacy.
My photography is grounded in Humanist principles. It’s not just documentation—it’s storytelling in service of memory and resilience. I’ve long believed that images should preserve what matters, not just what looks good.
I write to reflect on the ethics of visual storytelling: what it means to photograph truthfully, how images shape memory, and why storytelling must be accountable to the people it represents.
This site is a living archive. Not just of work—but of questions. About gear, presence, justice, and the role of images in a world too often spinning past nuance.



























Thank you for this really insightful and thought provoking section. You clearly are a man after my own heart: Truth is all and is the aim of all true photojournalists, and journalists generally. I’m pleased to know somone who takes their ethics and their work so seriously.
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