Fine Art Portrait Photographer | Western Sydney
Private studio
Some things are worth making permanent.
Some things are worth making permanent.
I make fine art portrait photographs in Western Sydney for individuals and families.
Not every photograph is a portrait. A portrait is a decision to pause, to look closely, and to make something that will outlast the moment it was taken in.
The work
I make considered, fine art portraits for individuals and families. Not paintings. Photographs. But photographs made with the kind of intention and patience that turns an image into a legacy object worth keeping, worth displaying, worth passing on.
I’ve been photographing for over forty years. I have my own opinions about how the industry does things, most of them run contrary to convention, and I’ve found that ignoring trends allows the work to endure.
I know this work matters because I never made that portrait of my own mother. My father died when I was young and was never properly photographed. My mother and I always intended to sit down and do it properly. The occasion never quite arrived, and I've never quite forgiven myself for that.
The craft is photography. What you're left with is art that outlasts the moment.
For individuals
This is where the work begins. One person who has decided that this moment in their life deserves to be recorded properly.
Sometimes it’s someone who has spent decades building something, a business, a reputation, a place in their community, and doesn’t yet have a portrait that reflects who they became in the process. Not a headshot. Not something taken at someone else’s event. Something considered, permanent, and honest.
Sometimes it’s someone who already knows exactly who they are and wants a portrait that holds that without flattening it. Someone who has lived enough to understand the value of being seen properly.
Sometimes it’s simply someone who has had enough of being invisible to the camera and has decided this is the moment it changes.
All of them are after the same thing. To be seen accurately, on their own terms, at this point in their life.
The occasion will not present itself. It rarely does.
This is you deciding to make it.
For families
A family portrait made this way is not a record of a day or a child’s milestone. This work is for families who are ready to be recorded intentionally, generational portraits, quiet connections, or moments that will endure.
Sessions are best suited for older children, teens, or families whose focus is on legacy and presence rather than fleeting milestones. The goal is a portrait that holds up over decades, not a casual snapshot of daily life.
It’s the quiet connection between people who know each other completely, a legacy piece made to hang on a wall and be looked at for decades.
Don't let it slip.
The session
Most sessions take place in my private studio in Glenmore Park, a calm private space where the only agenda is making a good portrait. It comfortably fits up to five people. Larger families can move to a nearby studio, or where genuinely necessary, an outdoor location with full professional lighting.
Sessions run 45 to 90 minutes. Long enough to stop thinking about the camera and start being a person again.
I'm not a natural in front of a lens myself, not false modesty, just fact, which is exactly why I know how to move people through the self-consciousness and into something genuine. Everyone is guided with patience. Nobody is rushed. It should feel less like a photoshoot and more like a quiet hour that happens to produce something extraordinary.
What you wear
Clothing shapes a portrait without dominating it. The goal is harmony, not uniformity. Each person expressing something of themselves within a palette that holds together as a whole.
Visit the Style Guide for specific guidance. It will save you standing in front of your wardrobe the night before wondering what you were thinking.
What you take home
Framing is personal and that decision stays with you, as it should. What I provide are the works themselves. Large fine art prints, matted canvases, portfolio boxes, and albums, each produced to archival standard and made to be displayed, handled, and eventually passed on to someone who will be glad you made them.
These are not files. They are objects with weight, made from photography, kept as art.
Before you get in touch
The Portrait FAQs answer most of the practical questions. When you're ready, reach out. I read every message myself and respond with care. These sessions are intentional from the first conversation and it's worth starting that way.
Get in touch.
If you’d like to discuss a portrait session, ask a question, or explore what might work for your family or personal project, you can reach me here. I’ll read every message carefully and respond as soon as I can. These sessions are considered and intentional, so it’s worth taking a moment to start the conversation properly.