
Food and Drink Photography: Salmon
Part of a seafood series — clean backgrounds, simple lighting, and a sharp focus on texture. The brief was straightforward: make it look good enough to eat.
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Part of a seafood series — clean backgrounds, simple lighting, and a sharp focus on texture. The brief was straightforward: make it look good enough to eat.

A personal project — a lychee shot for its own sake, exploring form, colour and translucency. The kind of image that comes from curiosity rather than a client brief, and often produces the most interesting results.

The brief: make a bedroom set look real — not staged. Propping and lighting created a lived-in feel while keeping everything print-ready. The kind of shot that sells the dream without showing the effort.

The brief was to showcase the high-gloss finish of a fitted wardrobe range. An undressed room kept the focus on the doors; lighting did the rest — making reflections work for the product rather than against it.

Lifestyle photography for a bathroom set designed to feel period, simple and elegant. Props were chosen to reinforce the mood; the lighting keeps the focus on the bath and gives the scene a calm, unhurried quality.

Lifestyle photography for an unusual radiator product — the client gave us free reign with lighting and props. Working on an ongoing basis meant a distinctive visual style developed naturally over time, giving the range a consistent, considered look.

Lifestyle photography for a cast iron radiator range aimed at the hotel sector — the set was designed and built in studio to create exactly the right environment. When the real-world context doesn’t exist yet, we build it.

Location photography in a kitchen showroom — lighting, camera angle and selective retouching were all used to present the space at its best. The kind of shot where what’s left out of frame matters as much as what’s in it.

Part of a series of location shots for a kitchen showroom — a model was included to bring the space to life and give it human scale. Good lighting and considered props made the kitchen feel genuinely lived-in rather than dressed.