About the vision
Where I Find Inspiration for My Photoshoots
A lot of people ask me where I get ideas for my shoots.
Is it Pinterest? Movies? Other photographers?
The answer is — yes, but not only.
Over time, I realized that inspiration is not something you just scroll and copy.
It’s something you notice and translate into your own feeling.


1. Details that create a mood
Sometimes it starts with something very small. In this shoot, it was a Tom Ford ring. I looked at it and thought — what kind of woman wears pieces like this?
Not the ring itself, but the energy behind it.
Calm. Composed. Confident.
And from that one detail, the whole concept was born.

2. Movies and visual references
I often get inspired by films. Not even the story but the lighting, the silence, the way a character moves in space.
A hotel room at night. City lights outside the window. A woman getting ready slowly. These scenes stay with me. And later, they show up in my work.

3. Pinterest — but differently
Yes, I use Pinterest. But not to copy poses.
I look for: textures, color palettes, mood, small details. Then I close it. Because the goal is not to recreate someone else’s photo — it’s to create your own version of that feeling.


4. Places and the energy of a city
Every place gives you a different version of yourself. These photos were taken in San Francisco, at the Four Seasons.
High floor.
Night.
Quiet room.
City glowing outside.

That environment changes how you feel. And that feeling becomes the shoot.
5. The most important part — your inner state
This is something many people underestimate. The best shoots don’t start with a moodboard. They start with a state. How do you feel? Who are you in this moment? What do you want to express?
Because in the end, a good photo is not about the idea. It’s about the energy behind it.


Inspiration is everywhere — in objects, films, places, light, and even in silence. But the most important thing is this:
Don’t ask “what should I shoot?”
Ask “what do I want to feel?”
And build everything from there.

Photography for the home
The ocean, as a poem
Ocean & wood photoshoot