• Stop-a-fly

  • Photographer: concept, styling, and on-location shoot in a camp ground setting.

  • Website & Social Media Content

  • Stop A Fly was a newly launched Australian product, a 100% Australian-made beverage protector designed for camping, backyard parties, fishing, festivals, and the great outdoors. As a startup entering the market, they needed authentic lifestyle photography that would introduce the brand to their audience and stop the scroll on social media.

    The creative direction was inspired by iconic Australian outdoor campaigns - think BCF, Great Northern, XXXX Gold. Real settings, relaxed energy, cold drink in hand. The brief called for images that felt genuinely Australian: dusty, sun-lit, unhurried. The kind of afternoon where a fly in your beer is a real problem worth solving.

    Photography was produced for use across Instagram and Facebook to support the brand's launch phase and build early community engagement.

  • Your Plan Manager

  • Communications & Information Officer

  • Staff portrait photography for “Meet The Team” page on their website

  • Your Plan Manager wanted to put a human face to their team with a dedicated Meet the Team page on their website. The brief was simple but genuinely challenging to execute: black and white portraits that felt fun, friendly, and completely natural. No stiff corporate headshots. No forced smiles at the lens.

    Team members were encouraged to just be themselves — look away, laugh, show a side profile, hand to the face mid-giggle. Whatever felt natural. The goal was to capture real personality rather than a posed performance, which is one of the hardest things to achieve in portrait photography. People freeze in front of a camera, and getting genuine, relaxed expressions out of a group of colleagues requires as much people skill as it does technical ability.

    The results were warm, cohesive, and authentic — exactly what a Plan Management organisation needs when it wants its audience to feel like they already know the team before they've picked up the phone.

  • Locations
    Snapper Rocks · Hiroshima · Ginza · Yamazaki · Kyoto ·

  • A personal collection of travel images captured across Japan and the Gold Coast. No brief, no client, just a camera and an eye for the quiet moments that happen inside the loud ones.

    There's a man alone with his thoughts on a Kyoto rooftop. Two children caught in a rare beat of stillness between bursts of play. The warmth of the Yamazaki Whisky Distillery. The Louis Vuitton store in Ginza, snapped in a brief gap in the foot traffic after waiting patiently for the street to clear. Our accommodation in Hiroshima, the Kiro Hotel. And back home, a lone surfer walking the beach at Snapper Rocks on a cold winter morning.

    I'm drawn to stillness amongst the chaos of everyday life, the pause between the moments, the breath before the next thing happens. That's what I'm always looking for through the lens.

  • The Craft Parlour

  • Photographer: personal project, candid and lifestyle photography

  • Optional Social Media Content

  • Sometimes the best work happens when there's no brief at all.

    I attended a workshop at The Craft Parlour, Burleigh Heads with my Canon camera and spent the afternoon making pottery and shooting, the space, the making, the moments between. The kind of unhurried, observant photography that's only possible when you're there as a guest rather than a hired hand.

    The images capture the warmth and texture of a craft workshop environment, hands at work, materials, light, the feeling of a creative afternoon. I shared them with the owner afterwards and a few have since appeared on their social media pages.

  • Webster Browne

  • Photographer: concept, styling, and shoot.

  • Website and social media content

  • A Brisbane-based residential builder needed photography that showed the technical and considered side of the trade, not just the finished product, but the work that happens before a single nail goes in. The focus was on to-scale technical drawings: detailed, precise, and the kind of image that quietly communicates professionalism to a prospective client.

    The challenge with trade photography is making the unglamorous parts look compelling. Technical drawings on a desk aren't an obvious hero shot, but with the right framing, light, and perspective they tell a story about craft, care, and attention to detail that a photo of a finished house simply can't.

    Images were produced for use across the client's website and social media channels.

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