A little about me
Photographer. Storyteller. Street-built. Cinema-fed. I work with real moments: movement, silence, strangers, nature, city light. I'm also wiring stories. I don't come from a straight path. I came from choosing a challenge and learning it until it becomes mine.
What inspires me
I grew up on films, books, and music. Movies taught me how to see. Music taught me how to feel timing. I'm obsessed with cinematography, not for perfection, but for atmosphere, rhythm, and emotion. That's why I shoot the way I do: like a scene, not a pose. A lot of my work starts the same way: headphones on, world off. Then I go outside and chase the frame.
the other half
Basketball isn't a hobby for me. It's one of the things that built me. It taught me discipline and teamwork, but also something harder: responsibility. The kind where people count on you in the last minutes of a match, when the score is tight and your body is tired. When you have to stay calm anyway. When you either hold the line or lead someone to a victory.
It also taught me what sport does to the brain. How movement clears the noise. How training makes you think better. How repetition becomes confidence.
And then there was the travel. Different cities, different countries, different teams, different energy. That's when I realized I'm not meant to stay in one place for too long. I'm built for motion.
Streetball taught me what coaches couldn't. Creativity. Improvisation. Reading people. I met players from backgrounds I'd never known, and I learned from them in ways that had nothing to do with basketball. It's still part of me. Even when I'm not holding a ball, I'm still moving.
the point
I care about the community because I've needed it. If you can help someone, why wouldn't you? I don't believe kindness is optional. I think it's a responsibility.
I don't chase trends. I want to create moments that matter and this project was one of them.
There's a line from Spider-Man that stuck with me for years: "There's a hero in all of us." Not in the loud, dramatic way. In the quiet way. The everyday way. The version of you that keeps you honest, makes you show up, makes you protect what matters. That's the version of myself I'm trying to become. Not perfect. Just better. More useful. More brave.
the girl in my head
This year I'm writing a book, but it didn't start this year. I've been carrying this story for most of my life. It began when I was young and getting bullied. I didn't have the words for what I felt, so I build a world instead. Music was the trigger. Headphones on, reality off.
I'd take everything that hurt and turn it into a fantasy story where I became stronger and fought back. I turned fear into monsters. I turned pain into challenges. I turned survival into character development. Over the years, that story kept growing. Every failure, every mistake, every loss, every comeback, it became another scene. Another chapter. Another reason the character had to evolve.
Now she's ready to tell her story. It's inspired by the films and books that carried me through life, but the truth is: every part of it starts from a feeling. And this time I'm finally putting it all together.
Snapshot
And I'm sharing work that's been building quietly for a long time. The work matters more than the name.