





Selected work, 2019–2025

Forty Seconds of Conviction
"We needed something that stopped the scroll — not another unboxing video."
— Mara Osei, Creative Director, Bright Matter Agency
The brief arrived on a Tuesday: a direct-to-consumer skincare launch with a three-day window, a 30-second deliverable, and a founder who kept saying "editorial." The studio had three practicals, a fog machine, and a camera operator who thought in music-video cuts.
Shot on an overcast Thursday in a rented Williamsburg loft. All light pulled from four 4×4 diffusion panels and two practicals. No additional grip. Colour temperature held at 4200K throughout.
The final cut opens on a single macro of condensation on glass — four seconds, no music. That silence cost three rounds of client feedback. It also made every frame after it feel earned.

The Founder Who Didn't Want to Be on Camera
"I hate video. I always look like I'm lying. You made me look like I meant it."
— Declan Walsh, CEO, Northbrook Supply
A B2B logistics company launching a rebrand needed a film that said "we've grown up" without saying a word of it. The founder was articulate in a room and wooden on a monitor. The warehouse was beautiful. The product was pallets.
Two shoot days across a 40,000 sq ft facility in New Jersey. Available light supplemented by one 12K HMI through north-facing skylights. All interviews shot handheld with a 50mm at T1.4.
We cut the founder's best take — not his most polished one. There's a moment at 2:14 where he pauses and almost laughs at himself. That stayed. The client tried to pull it twice. We argued for it both times. It's why the film works.

A Day That Didn't Need Saving
"Every other videographer showed us highlight reels. You showed us a film. We cried in the Zoom call."
— Sofia & James Adeyemi, Clients, married October 2024
They wanted to remember the ceremony the way memory actually works — not chronologically, but by texture: the way her mother kept touching her own collar, the way the ring bearer fell asleep under the chuppah. The challenge was building a 12-minute arc with no script, no second takes, and a schedule that dissolved by noon.
Hudson Valley, late October. Two operators, one primary A7 IV and one gimbal unit. Golden hour lasted 22 minutes. Shot 14:1 ratio. The ceremony ran 40 minutes over.
The film opens with them the morning after, not the morning of. We see the dress on the chair before we see the wedding. That structural inversion took three cuts to find and changed everything about how the ceremony reads when it finally arrives.
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