Photography




Geolocation

In the Geolocation project, the sensory nature of photography is explored. Photographs transport viewers to specific moments, evoking memories tied to sight, sound, and emotion. But the project goes further. By embedding the exact location—down to the address and latitude/longitude—each image is grounded in its precise place. This adds depth to the memory, allowing viewers not only to relive the moment but also to pinpoint where it happened, as if they could return to that location at any time. The connection between time and place becomes a visual map, a sensory reminder of where one has been.








Geolocation is a personal archive—an exploration of memory through photography and design. Each image is paired with its exact coordinates, preserving not just the moment, but the place it belongs to. By embedding location into the design, each piece becomes a reminder that where something happens is as significant as the moment itself.







Plain Sight

Plain Sight is an exercise in seeing—an interplay between photography and design that turns personal travel into visual storytelling. Each spread balances structured layouts with organic imagery, using type and composition to guide the viewer through moments both intimate and expansive. By blending editorial design with documentary photography, this project highlights the intersection of format and feeling, where graphic design becomes as much a tool for capturing memory as the camera itself.