About
Hi I’m Elizabeth
I’m someone who notices things. The way a person carries themselves when they finally relax. The expression that slips through for half a second before they become aware of the camera. The details, mood, and little bits of personality that make an image feel like it truly belongs to the person in it.
That’s a big part of why I’m drawn to photography. I love images that feel honest, expressive, and alive, not so polished that they lose the person or feeling at the center of them.

How I See the Work
At the heart of my work is a deep respect for individuality. I don’t believe beauty comes from fitting a mold, and I’m not interested in creating images based on who the world thinks someone should be. What matters to me is creating photographs that reflect who a person truly is and how they want to be seen.
That can look different from one person to the next. Sometimes it comes through in the setting, the background, or the details that make an image feel personal. Sometimes it’s something quieter and more understated. More than anything, I want the person in the photograph to feel connected to the image itself, to feel that it reflects them honestly and represents them in a way that feels true to who they are.
I want the experience of being photographed to feel relaxed, natural, and genuinely enjoyable. It shouldn’t feel stiff, overly controlled, or like there’s a right way to act in front of the camera. The strongest images usually happen when people stop overthinking, loosen up, and just settle into the moment.
You don’t need to show up already knowing how to pose or how to look completely comfortable in front of the camera. I’ll help take the pressure off so you can settle in and stop overthinking it, because that’s usually where the most candid, expressive, and meaningful images begin.
Why It Matters to Me
What It’s Like to Work With Me
What matters to me most is creating work that feels honest, personal, and lasting. I care about the kind of images that reflect people in a way that feels true to who they are, not shaped by who others think they’re supposed to be. When someone can look at a photograph and feel connected to it, when it feels like a reflection of something real, that means something to me.
I want my work to honor individuality with care. Not by exaggerating it or turning it into something it isn’t, but by paying attention to it in a way that feels thoughtful and true. If someone can look at the final images and feel that they’re represented honestly, thoughtfully, and in a way that feels true to them, then the work has done what I hoped it would do.
