“Your first 10,000 photographs are your worst.” - Henry Cartier-Bresson

Lisboa

Paris

Paris

NYC

NYC

NYC

NYC
In an age dominated by digital technology, film photography offers a unique and tangible connection to the past. Each frame is captured with intention, patience, and a sense of anticipation. The process of shooting on film is slower, more deliberate, and requires a deeper understanding of light, composition, and timing. Unlike digital photography, where instant feedback is available, film forces the photographer to trust their skills and vision.
Every roll of film carries with it a certain unpredictability, making each shot a moment of creative risk. The grain, the color, the texture ”film has a quality that cannot be replicated by modern digital tools. For me, shooting in film is about embracing imperfections and celebrating the authenticity of the moment. It’s a way of seeing the world not through a screen, but through the lens of something tangible, something real.
These images are a testament to the beauty of film: raw, unfiltered, and true to the spirit of photography as an art form. They capture not just a scene, but an emotion, a memory, and a story frozen in time.