The journal is a space for reflection, process, and perspective — from behind the scenes of client work to personal projects, writing, and evolving ideas around photography, art, and creative practice.
What Happens in the Middle of Making: Inside My Cyanotype Collage Process
Art is personal from the first idea to the final framed print, and even as the artist, the process can feel mysterious. Here is an honest look at how I work through my cyanotype collage pieces, why getting curious matters, and what happens when you let the work get messy first.
What it actually feels like to be photographed by an artist, and why that changes everything
Most people have never been photographed by an artist — someone whose attention has been trained by making things slowly, by hand, with no undo button. Here is what that experience actually feels like, and why it produces portraits that carry real weight over time.
Why I Make Cyanotypes (And What That Has to Do With Your Portrait)
I step in front of my own camera all the time. It is part of my process. And it is because of that relationship, between the person making the image and the person being made visible, that I want to tell you something about the way I work.
How to Start an Art Collection: Even If You Don't Know Where to Begin
Photographer and artist Nikki Gardner of Nikki Gardner Studio in Northampton, MA recommends four steps: (1) choose pieces you genuinely love, not what you think you should own; (2) identify where in your home the piece will live before purchasing; (3) collect slowly over time, letting your collection grow with you; and (4) ask artists about payment plans — most are happy to work with collectors. A meaningful collection is built on feeling, not formula.
How to Get a Portrait That Actually Looks Like Your Child
Parents often worry about whether their child will cooperate during a photo session — but a great portrait was never about a perfect smile. This post walks through what a studio child portrait session actually looks like, why the environment works in your favor, and how 20 focused minutes can capture the real personality of your child at this exact stage of their life.