
Industrial Photography: Tool making
Industrial photography of a toolmaking process — shot to show technical capability in a way that feels considered rather than clinical. The brief was to make precision engineering look as impressive as it is.
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Industrial photography of a toolmaking process — shot to show technical capability in a way that feels considered rather than clinical. The brief was to make precision engineering look as impressive as it is.

Commercial industrial photography of toolmakers on location in the Midlands. The challenge was to keep the environment looking clean and the images visually interesting — showing the people behind the process, not just the machinery.

On-site industrial photography of molten metal at the point of pour — part of the shot manufacturing process. The brief: make a demanding, unglamorous environment visually compelling.

Industrial photography inside a coffin manufacturing facility. The brief called for a panoramic treatment to convey the true scale of the operation — transforming a large, functional space into something genuinely compelling.

Industrial photography of the shot blasting process — making an unglamorous environment look purposeful and precise. Shot for use on the client’s website.

Industrial photography for a coffin manufacturer — the brief was to communicate a clean, well-organised working environment and demonstrate manufacturing quality. A sensitive subject handled with straightforward professionalism.

Industrial photography at a foundry — molten aluminium at the point of pour. The brief was to make something inherently dramatic look as skilled and considered as it actually is.

Industrial photography of an aluminium casting being cut on a band saw. The brief was to make an unglamorous process look interesting — careful post-production brought the image up to the standard the client needed.

Location photography of molten steel as part of the shot-blasting production process. The brief was drama — and the raw material delivered it. A series designed to make the viewer stop and look twice at an industrial subject.