
Ever since I was a kid, I was surrounded by cameras, photo albums, and home videos. In my family, everyday life was always being documented—afternoons with my siblings, road trips, moments that seemed ordinary back then but now feel priceless. I used to pretend I was taking photos with a film camera, imagining I was the one capturing other people’s memories. That’s probably where it all started.
Over time, I came to see that photography has a certain kind of magic: the power to freeze fleeting moments, to hold onto things memory alone might lose. That same nostalgia I feel when I look at images from my own life is exactly what I try to communicate through my work.
I studied photography at the School of Art in Murcia. At first, I was really into travel and documentary photography, but eventually, I found a deeper connection with portrait and fashion photography too. I didn’t quite understand why I felt so drawn to such different styles, until my teacher told me something that shifted everything:
“You photograph people. You seek the human essence. And there are many ways to do that.”
That moment helped me realize I didn’t need to pick just one path. What really interests me is people—their gestures, their connections, the mood that surrounds them. Each genre has taught me different tools to capture those things more effectively.
After finishing my studies, I moved to New York. Before I left, I was gifted a film camera from my family. I brought it with me to document my journey with a more intimate, intentional perspective, like I was trying to hold on to time itself. Living there, I kept growing as a photographer, constantly inspired by new experiences.
When I came back to Spain, I realized that wedding photography brought together everything I care about: real stories, raw emotion, and the quiet beauty of genuine moments.
I’m drawn to spontaneous moments, the ones where no one even notices I’m there. That’s where the truth lives. And even when there’s a posed shot or someone looking straight at the camera, there’s always something that slips through: a trace of something real, something lived.
I shoot from an emotional place, but also with a deep appreciation for beauty. My goal isn’t just to document, but to preserve the feeling of what once was, a visual memory that still stirs something in you when you look back at it.
“Let’s capture your story the way it truly felt, so it lives on, not just as an image, but as a memory”


After finishing my studies, I moved to New York. Before leaving, I inherited an analog camera from my family. I wanted to take it with me to document my journey with a more intimate and deliberate perspective, as if I were trying to preserve the days forever. There, I continued to grow as a photographer, surrounded by new stimuli.
When I returned to Spain, I discovered that wedding photography was the perfect way to bring together everything that drives me: telling real stories with a thoughtful eye.
I love capturing spontaneous moments, the ones where no one notices I’m there. To me, that’s where the truth lies. And even when there is intention or someone looks at the camera, there is always something that escapes, something lived that remains.
I work from an emotional place, but also with an eye for aesthetics. I want my photos not only to document, but to preserve the beauty of what once was, becoming a visual memory that moves you when you look back on it.