I’m a London-based filmmaker and editor with over a decade of experience producing documentary, branded and cultural films. I focus on real people, places and ideas, often filming observationally in contributors’ own environments.
I work end-to-end as a self-shooting producer-director-editor, developing concepts, filming on location and shaping projects through post-production. My work spans short documentaries, cultural features and brand storytelling, across architecture, design, art, food and sustainability. I am proficient in DaVinci Resolve, with nine years’ experience in Adobe Premiere Pro and training in Avid, and I frequently shoot in real-world environments with contributors and clients, solo or in small teams.
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I filmed a short documentary exploring Biome Bioplastics’ development of biodegradable tree shelters designed to replace traditional oil-based plastic guards used in forestry and tree planting. Tree shelters are widely used to protect young saplings, but most conventional versions are made from non-biodegradable plastics that often remain in the landscape long after their use. 
The film focuses on how the company’s bioplastic materials aim to solve that problem by creating shelters that protect trees during their early growth but biodegrade naturally after their working life. 
Shot in a documentary style, the project combined interview with process footage to explain the environmental context behind the innovation while keeping the focus on the practical development of the product. The piece formed part of a broader clean-technology storytelling project highlighting sustainable materials and environmental solutions.
I filmed a series of short brand films for Gail’s Bakery to accompany their Christmas menu photography campaign. Shot on location at Stepney Townhouse in London, the project required working alongside a large photography team while capturing video content designed for multiple formats across web and social platforms.
Using my Canon C400 shooting in 6K RAW, I framed coverage to accommodate both widescreen and vertical outputs, allowing the final edits to translate across 16:9, 4:5 and 1:1 deliveries. Working within a tight schedule and a constantly shifting set environment, I focused on capturing natural movement, product detail and atmospheric moments that complemented the still photography.
The result was a series of flexible social edits designed to bring Gail’s seasonal food offering to life across digital platforms.
As part of my Made in London series exploring independent craftspeople across the city, I filmed artisan Archie Proudfoot at work in his studio. The short documentary focuses on his process and environment, using observational cinematography and natural sound to capture the rhythm and materiality of making.
The film formed part of a wider series celebrating London’s makers and the persistence of craft in a modern city. Made in London was an early personal project that helped launch my filmmaking career and establish my focus on documenting designers, artisans and the spaces where they create.
A short documentary profiling South London chef Steve McClarty and the story behind his Deptford seafood restaurant, Sharkbait & Swim. Commissioned by Appear Here as part of a campaign highlighting independent businesses, the film follows McClarty’s journey from living in hostels across South East London to opening his own kitchen.
Shot on location around Deptford, the piece combines interview, observational footage, and kitchen action to capture both the energy of a working restaurant and the personal drive behind building a local food business. The production was filmed on the Canon C70 using a lean documentary setup to stay close to the environment and the subject’s natural rhythm.
Discover the traditional art of scagliola, a historic decorative technique using selenite powder, pigments and natural glue to achieve an effect similar to marble.
Watch as the Bianco Bianchi family workshop in Florence, Italy, walk you through the centuries-old scagliola process step by step - from mixing the squelchy plaster to polishing the final masterpiece with beeswax. The family have been masters of scagliola since the 1960s, passing their secrets and skills down through each generation, preserving the ancient art form to this day.
In this ASMR video, relax into calming sounds and mesmerising visuals as you join the artisans at work in their studio. Experience squelching, carving, pouring, cutting, squishing, drawing, painting, mixing and polishing, as the process unfolds. Ideal for lovers of artisan craftsmanship, art history, and relaxing ASMR content, the video celebrates a nearly-forgotten decorative art form, almost lost to oblivion.
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