Landing on this page means you want to learn a meaningful thing.
I can help with three:
Photo Book · Drawing · Perspective
Not sure where to start? I'd go with the Photo Book.
PHOTO BOOK
You shoot a lot.
Your second or third or tenth drive is full. So you ask yourself—don’t you?—what’s the purpose? Maybe I need a new camera. Another lens. More expensive one. Surely this will give me purpose.
Well… no. I don’t think so.
Your purpose is your story. And you need a book to tell it.
Your book.
But be warned—making a photo book is one hell of a journey. It’s not for everyone.
You first need to go out there. Live through rain, brambles, wind, and awkward moments. Get angry with the light until you understand it. Learn to enjoy the best moments you missed. So you shoot, you fail, you start again.
Because you have a story to tell.
One day you come back home soaked, hungry, thirsty. Yet unbelievably happy—you finally have the images.
Only to realise that’s not the end.
Now you have to question every image. You need to choose a few—or a few dozen—out of hundreds. You love them all, but you sacrifice your darlings because they don’t belong to the story.
Then comes the sequence.
Funny enough, you always need one more night to finalise it. Then another for the cover.
You make intentional decisions. Joyful and painful. You need them all to keep going. Until the end. Until one day it arrives.
Your book.
Your story.
And it exists only because you refused to give up.
Do you have a story to tell?
DRAWING & SKETCHING
Because drawing is a language—like music, maths, or English—we start with the simple line. Then hatching, shape recognition, primitives—the solid foundations that you build your skills on.
This is paired with loose sketching and drawing from imagination, allowing you to stay engaged without burning out.
You need to learn to see the world differently. Then train your hand to depict what your eye sees—the way you want it to. Your brain needs to develop enough connections to make this work. That is how the eye and hand learn to speak to each other.
This is not a tip-and-trick course.
This is the long journey of building your craft.
It takes time. Commitment. Intent. Frustration. Victories… sometimes.
If you are looking for a shortcut—this is not for you.
If you want to embark on a journey—get in touch.
PERSPECTIVE
Let’s put it this way—perspective is a tool. Like a pencil, eraser, or grammar. Yes—grammar. But simple grammar.
Understanding its basics is not rocket science. Believe me—you can do it. Of course it won’t happen overnight, but after a few days of theory and practice you’ll have a fairly good grasp of how perspective works.
Then comes field work. A lot of it. Because perspective, like grammar, is only useful when it becomes intuitive, when you stop thinking about it and simply use it.
But that’s another story altogether.