For a long time, I believed the photograph was the final form—that the image itself was the destination. But over time, that changed. I started chasing the feeling behind the frame—the energy of the moment, the story still unfolding. That’s when my work became something else: not just images, but objects. Functional art that lives in the world. A lighter, a plate, a tool—each piece is a vessel, carrying the emotion I felt when I pressed the shutter. These aren’t just souvenirs of an image; they’re continuations. Invitations to hold, to use, to feel. This is about shifting how art is consumed, displayed, and experienced—bringing it off the wall and into your life.
ART MIAMI TRAVELING EXHIBITION
I turned Miami into my gallery by carrying miniature prints of my work in a briefcase and staging pop-up moments everywhere I went during Art Miami 2025.
Tokyo on Fire: Photography Lighters
This limited collection features original photographs I took in Japan, printed onto refillable lighters as a nod to the country's deeply embedded smoking culture—seen in everything from vintage advertisements to late-night ramen shops and anime. By placing these images on an object associated with ritual and habit, the photos take on new meaning, capturing not just a place, but a cultural rhythm.
K-Stop, Tokyo Side: NEON MARKET PLATE
While exploring Japan, I found that some of the most memorable moments came not just from what I saw—but from what I ate. This image, taken outside a glowing Korean restaurant reflects the late-night culinary mashups you find in Japan’s urban sprawl. I printed it on a ceramic plate as a way to bring that culinary adventure home. The square shape nods to Japanese tableware design—elegant, functional, and intentional—while the image captures the layered flavors of cross-cultural city life.
Photo WATCH
A little bit bold, a little bit undercover. This custom gold watch features one of my original photos tucked right into the face—subtle at first glance, but spicy when you look closer.
BREAD BLAZER
I took a thrifted double-breasted jacket and added three slices of bread to the back for no reason other than it made me laugh—and then topped it off with a triangle slice pocket square . It’s part surrealism, part streetwear, part pantry-core. A reminder not to take style (or yourself) too seriously.