I'm a portrait photographer based in South London. I graduated with a first-class degree from the Glasgow School of Art in 2023, and have worked on editorial commissions including for The Times newspaper and organisations such as Open City, Publica, Drawing Matter and the City of London. I work primarily with natural light and minimal staging, aiming to create images that feel natural and grounded, portraits that are as much about atmosphere and emotion as they are about style.

Across all my work, I’m drawn to stories that are personal yet collective, those that show how people, space, and storytelling come together to reflect who we are, and who we might become.

My project What’s Your Favourite Outfit To Dance In? (2021) was born during lockdown and featured 172 students in Glasgow posing in their favourite dancing outfits outside their front doors, often to my personalised playlist. Shot mostly on a Mamiya 645, the series became a joyful celebration of post-pandemic self-expression, bursting with fishnets, velvet, vintage finds, and the spirit of Glasgow’s club scene. It was featured by It’s Nice That and Refinery29 for its energy, fashion, and sense of togetherness.

In 2023, I published To Be Adorned, a photobook featuring 100 portraits of people in meaningful outfits, photographed in personal spaces like bedrooms, living rooms, and studios. The book explores the quiet intimacy between self-presentation and the domestic sphere, and includes written contributions from sociologist Angela McRobbie and design historian Martha Cruz. The design was a collaboration with Billy Paterson.

Alongside these, I’ve produced titles like The Female Gaze (2018) and What Does It Mean to Be a Sister? (2023), projects that blend photography and text to explore relationships, identity, and intersectional feminism, including themes of gender, race, mental health, and sexuality.

Collaboration is central to my practice. I often work with writers, designers (like Tom Ive and Billy Paterson), and my portrait subjects themselves to create visual-textual photobooks that feel layered and inclusive.