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Projects
My Projects
The itches that I can't help scratchingI am not usually a "project photographer", but there are some themes that I just can't let go of. I keep coming back for more because it is like a bothersome itch that you can't get rid of. I have a need to take pictures of these subjects and projects. They began during my time in university and were a component of my degree. It is like telling a child not to pick a scab off a cut when you urge me to leave them alone. We all know what happens when it is picked.
the itches that i can't scratch

alone in my head
The sanctuary and the trap.
'Alone in my Head' began during my second year of university at a time when my own mental health felt like a heavy fog. It became a therapeutic necessity—a way to externalise the internal weight I was carrying. The camera became a tool to look for my own isolation reflected back at me.

daylight sluggery
Dramas unfolding in the dirt.
Slugs, snails, and puppy dogs' tails—if you are of an age, you know how the old nursery rhyme goes. But where most people see a garden nuisance to be ignored or swept away, I found an obsessive, mesmerizing world of texture and slow-motion survival that I simply couldn't look away from.

life in reflection
It's life but in reverse.I have always hated taking traditional photos of people because of how they freeze or change the moment a camera appears. Shooting through reflective surfaces allows me to catch people completely unawares, capturing them in their most natural, undisturbed states.

the cut
Walking the veins of the past.
'The Cut' was the original motorway that drove the Industrial Revolution. It carved through the landscape, reshaping communities and building the modern world. But long after the industry faded, the cut remained—and for me, it was the place where I felt most at home.