I am a photographer shaped by patience, partnership, and place.

For more than twenty years, photography has been both my craft and my way of paying attention—to light as it changes, to moments that ask to be held rather than hurried, and to the quiet spaces where meaning often lives. I live and work in Centennial, Colorado, where wide skies, shifting seasons, and daily stillness continue to inform how I see and how I work.

Much of this work has been shaped alongside my wife, Janna—my partner in life and in rhythm. Our shared travels, pauses, and conversations have reinforced a simple truth: the most resonant images are rarely forced. They arrive when you slow down enough to notice what’s already there.

My approach to photography is intentional and unhurried.

In landscapes and urbanscapes, I seek scenes where light and shadow are already in conversation—where form, balance, and atmosphere quietly align. These are not places I arrive to take, but places I wait with. Wildlife photography follows the same philosophy: respect first, distance when needed, and patience always. The goal is never spectacle, but presence—the stillness of a living moment allowed to remain intact.

Portraits are approached differently, but with the same care. Sessions are relaxed and natural, guided by comfort rather than performance. There is no rush to pose and no pressure to become something else. Light is allowed to lead, expressions are given time to settle, and the portrait becomes a quiet collaboration rather than a transaction.

Across fine art landscapes, urban studies, wildlife, and portrait photography, the throughline remains the same:
to see with intention, and to capture with care.

If you’re drawn to photography that values stillness, honesty, and light allowed to speak for itself, you may already be in the right place.

Would you like to explore the work—or simply spend a little time with it?