Morning Light
There's something about the way light filters through morning mist that makes everything feel suspended in time. The world slows down, and for a moment, nothing else matters but the quiet beauty of the ordinary.
Welcome! Here's a brief introduction:
I started working in advertising in 2010 without formal qualifications. In 2017, I had the opportunity to pursue further studies in Media Communication, majoring in Advertising and minoring in Journalism.
Photography and collecting music are my hobbies. In 2006, I began publishing my photos on the-waiting-unknown.deviantart.com, where I learned digital photography and Photoshop alongside like-minded individuals. I also co-founded a community within DeviantArt@ unknownphotographers.deviantart.com. The other founder taught me Photoshop and encouraged me to switch to 35mm film photography since DSLRs were prohibitively expensive at the time.
I currently upload my work to flickr.com/-21 just for the sake of archiving. Much of my work remains archived privately, as I prefer not to entrust big data platforms with my life's passion—hundreds of 35mm film rolls documenting my hometown and the current issues I follow.
Book as soon as I compile and source publishing - 2026 (God Willing)
I use social media as a sandbox and archive for select portions of my work and memories.
This early experience laid the foundation for the work I do today in freelance advertising, though I remain connected to the corporate world for sustainability.
Over time, I will share lessons learned, notes, journal entries, and publish my work and portfolio here for archival purposes.
Thank you for reading! This website is a work in progress. Please explore the blog section, where you can expect reviews, observations, and posts related to culture, technology, music, media, and journalism. I also plan to add links to blogs I follow soon.
Gear I'm using:
There's something about the way light filters through morning mist that makes everything feel suspended in time. The world slows down, and for a moment, nothing else matters but the quiet beauty of the ordinary.
Walking through the city at golden hour, every corner holds a story. The way shadows stretch across pavement, how neon signs begin to glow—these are the moments that remind us why we carry cameras in the first place.
There's an honesty to 35mm that digital can't replicate. Every frame costs something. Every shot requires intention. This constraint isn't limiting—it's liberating. It forces you to see differently, to wait for the right moment rather than spray and pray.
The grain, the imperfections, the way film captures light—it all adds up to something that feels more human, more real.
In a world that never stops moving, finding quiet spaces becomes essential. Empty cafes, library corners, the pause between songs—these are where clarity lives.