About
I grew up in Wisconsin, but my view of the world has been shaped by living in Spain, Mexico, London, New York City, and along both coasts of the U.S.—and by wandering far beyond them. Whether it’s a quiet street close to home or a city halfway across the world, I’ve always been drawn to the way light and place come together in unexpected ways.
I picked up my first camera more than 45 years ago—a simple disc camera—and never really put it down. Over time, I moved into manual SLRs and learned to develop silver gelatin prints in the darkroom, where I began to understand the patience and subtlety photography requires. Today, I continue that exploration digitally, still chasing the same thing: moments that feel real, fleeting, and worth holding onto.
When I first moved to the UK, I remember thinking, *gray skies… always gray skies.* But the longer I stayed, the more I realized no two skies were ever the same. Some days the gray leaned blue; other days it carried weight and depth. The clouds changed everything—stormy and dramatic one moment, soft and ethereal the next. That realization changed how I see—not just in photography, but in life. Beauty isn’t something you travel to find. It’s always there, waiting to be noticed.
I photograph what I notice along the way—sunrise over the Atlantic, reflections in a quiet canal, or a fleeting moment on an ordinary walk. Because beauty surrounds us. You just have to look.