Singapore Sessions
This Autumn, I'm capturing magic in the golden light of Singapore’s most beautiful outdoor spaces. Whether you dream of barefoot moments on soft, sandy shores or laughter among lush tropical blooms, our garden and beach hybrid sessions are made to preserve the fleeting beauty of family life.
These relaxed, story-led sessions combine both photography and video, so you’ll receive a gallery of soft, timeless images along with a beautifully edited sprinkling of video clips – a keepsake that moves, breathes, and brings back the sounds and feelings of your day together.
Perfect for families, maternity, or children’s portraits, each session is styled to highlight your natural connection, set against nature’s loveliest backdrops as the light turns gentle and golden in the later months of the year.
I’ll guide you gently throughout – no stiff poses, just genuine joy, movement, and warmth.
Let’s make something beautiful.
Rooted in Story.
Rooted in story.
A Brand Reborn: Rooted in Story, Steeped in Meaning
Rebranding is more than just a fresh coat of paint, it’s a homecoming. A return to what matters most. Over the past few months, I’ve taken a long, thoughtful look at the heart of what I offer and who I am, and what you see today is the result of that journey.
Every part of this new brand, every colour, word, and motif has been chosen with intention. Not just to look beautiful (though I hope it does), but to feel true. To reflect the kind of experience I want to create for you, and the kind of legacy I want to help you curate.
The soul of this brand is deeply personal. It’s shaped by memory and meaning.
The garden at the centre of it all? It began with my grandad’s. A place where everything felt still and slow. Where I first noticed the light falling softly through apple trees and we’d play for hours. That garden has never really left me and it continues to serve as a huge inspiration to me. It’s in every frame I shoot, every story I tell. It taught me to notice.
The bow motif is inspired by my daughter her gentle, playful love of bows, the way she wears them with pride, the way they speak so sweetly to girlhood. To that fleeting magic we try so hard to hold onto. It felt only right that a symbol of her be woven into this brand and into the stationary I have lovingly developed.
Fonts were chosen not only for their visual beauty, but for the way they feel. There’s a quiet rhythm to them, echoing handwritten scripture and the kind of script you might find in old letters or well-worn books, post cards and little reminders. I wanted the words here to feel lived in, familiar, and full of warmth.
Speaking of words, so many are drawn from the pages of poems, versus and storybooks. Language, like imagery, holds power. The phrases and titles you’ll find here have been carefully gathered to evoke feeling, not just function. A sense of wonder, of nostalgia, of quiet reflection.
The colour palette reflects the world of my films. Soft, muted hues—ivory, sage, dusty rose, pale gold. The colours of countryside kitchens, faded florals, sun-washed linens. These are tones I return to again and again in my work. They create calm. They feel like home and they ensure the focus is on the beautiful interactions we all want to remember.
Even the florals that weave through this new visual identity were inspired by my wedding bouquet, adding another thread of personal history. Another nod to love, legacy, and the meaningful milestones that shape us.
This brand isn’t just a new look. It’s an offering. A way of inviting you into a world where stories are slow, light is golden, and meaning is everywhere.
Thank you for being here. For growing with me. For valuing not just the product, but the process. I hope this new chapter feels just as tender, thoughtful, and true as the stories I’m so lucky to tell.
How to write a love letter.
The love letter is a huge part of my process and it’s just generally, a lovely thing to do. It can however, feel quite overwhelming so I’ve written a post on how begin, what to include and some more tips on writing your own.
I am one of those people, old school romantics, who truly believes that everyone has a book in them. I find that writing, particularly writing letters, is exceptionally therapeutic to me and offers me the space, time and connection with myself to allow truthful reflections and processing so many of us seek through activities like meditation and yoga.
I truly find the process exceptionally cathartic and I have long been a fan of putting paper to pen, and just writing.
When I was twenty weeks pregnant with Edie, I started writing letters to her. Sometimes, they were longer letters about my experiences of pregnancy and motherhood, some were musings about life and some were as simple as annotated receipts to show the costs of our weekly shop.
My daughter now has about 100 letters I have written to her and continue to do so, which are my authentic experience and my emotional journey.
When I started putting films together then, I felt drawn to include not only noises from the session but offer a package, a service which is centred around all the unspoken emotions and words which punctuated the beautiful imagery in front of me.
The first time I put the two together for a film of my own, I knew that it was something I needed to offer and now, the love letter package is one of my favourite packages. Not only do I find that it offers me and my clients a deeper connection, as I help them through this process, but it offers parents the chance to create that dialogue with themselves and with their children in a way that they perhaps hadn’t thought of before or had the time to do.
I thought then, for this blog, I would share and discuss the letter writing process that works for me and would work for a love letter film.
1. Feng shui
Create a calm environment within your home or at your desk. Perhaps pop a candle on and make sure there is nothing in the environment that is going to distract you or pull you from this very important task.
2. Breathwork
Take a moment to breathe; in and out.Place your hands on your chest and feel the connection and love which emanates within you. Drawing on this divine and unique feeling will help you connect and communicate your ideas more clearly and build a creative bridge.
3. Inspiration
Have a think about your favourite songs, poems, quotes and ideas which accurately articulate your experience and resonate with you.Notice any patterns or words that are prevalent.
4. Rhythm
The process of a spoken love letter or written one is exceptionally similar to a spoken word poem. Notice where you naturally want to pause for a moment of reflection. Close your eyes and sway your body when you’re thinking about your next line.
5. Think horizontally
The timeline or event structure of your letter does not need to be linear, our journey into parenthood is certainly not. Punctuate your letter with memory and events of emotional significance but don’t worry if it’s not in chronological order.
6. Say lines aloud, free from judgement and alone.
We all know that public speaking or even speaking from the heart can be intimidating. Find a safe space to read lines aloud to help you.
7. It doesn’t have to be perfect.
Most letters, especially those spoken, tend to be a stream of consciousness and they don’t have to be perfect. This is fundamentally a letter which is for you and your child/children.Be authentic.
8. If it’s not working, move on and try again later.
This process should be therapeutic and enjoyable.
What I’m hopeful that these tips will encourage is a moment of piece and reflection, and some space to curate a love letter, which you may choose to put over a family film, if you’d like, or it be the start of a personal and deep journey of connection and legacy, for yourself and your loved ones.
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Time is a thief.
Time is a thief.
So, here is my one of my first blog entries and it only seemed appropriate that I make it about my journey into filmmaking and the importance of family films to me. Click 'play' above to listen, or take a few moments to read along with me.
One of my favourite things to do, as an adult, is sit down and watch one of the two or three home videos we have from when we were young. I love looking at my Mum and Dad in love and how their personal style has changed. I love making comparisons to how different their lives looked at 30 to how mine does.
There's nothing quite like seeing the faces and hearing the voices of those people in our lives who are no longer with us, and just having a moment to reflect on how beautiful, important and sublime they were to us in childhood and beyond.
I love looking at my sisters and feeling an immense sense of pride for who they are and who they have blossomed into. It's an experience which I think is genuinely unique.
I find it comforting, rewarding, incredibly emotional and deeply important in connecting with who I am now and learning about the type of person and mother I aspire to be. I knew then, that I wanted to create a library of resources for my own daughter, and my future self to pass on the opportunity to have this experience, and this sense of somehow cheating time, memory or my transience in this world.
I remember reading Joseph White's poem 'Time is a Thief' and being stunned at well one, how bleak it is, but mainly actually how true those words are and how important it is to so many of us to create some of sense of legacy and record of significant moments in our lives, however insignificant they may seem to the spinning world.
I started writing letters to Edie when I was around 19 weeks pregnant, and now at 3 , she has perhaps 50/60 letters from me. Some of them are longer, more profound and reflective about how different stages of motherhood has impacted me. Others are more for pure documentation purposes- the cost of the weekly shop today, perhaps.
They're always honest, they are always loving and they're an invaluable gift I can give to her one day.
I also took thousands of videos and photos of my time being pregnant and in the first year of her life, I genuinely took about 2000 images and clips of her. It honestly became a little overwhelming. I'd see other Mums doing the same and often sharing these clips in video diaries as perhaps a blog or an instagram post/story. What occurred to me though was firstly, that I had no idea what I was going to do with this material in the long term. 500 video clips are great but they didn't really tell a cohesive story or realistically give that sense of life right now in the way that my childhood 10 minute home videos did. And with phones being so disposable in today's world and technology moving so quickly, I feared that all of this would perhaps be lost as data on a memory stick somewhere or a CD that would perhaps get scratched or damaged.
I also noticed that, of the 2000+ images and videos, I was perhaps in 10 of them and this was also true of the Mums I'd seen share these clips and pictures, too.
If I hadn't written the letters to Edie, my whole emotional journey as a new mother wouldn't have been documented in any way, really. And for me, that felt like a bit of a tragedy because it represented such a fundamental shift in my world and in me.
I needed to have some sense of what I looked like and sounded like. The Mum voice I adopted or the funny little songs I made up. The greys making an appearance and the clothes being more comfortable.
It was really, at this point, that I sort of made a commitment to myself to be more present with Edie in my day to life with her, and make what I document of our time authentic and purposeful. I started making little videos where I spoke to her about what she was doing and how she made me feel. Rhys and I recorded some audio for her at 6 months and I asked him some questions about how he felt about being a Dad, and how his life had changed. This was a really fun experience and I'd whole heartedly recommend it. I knew though, that video was the end goal.
I moved on to then making little films of our adventures together, and to try and make sure I was in the picture or that my experience was being noted and documented, just as much as Edie's or Rhys'.
I did a course on filming, invested in mentoring, bought a new camera and watched a ton of videos on Youtube about shutter speed, aperture, light and audio. I called upon photographer and videographer friends to ask questions about creative choices and ideas. I really was and am, so committed to trying to hone all of the creative energy, joy and passion into producing an heirloom or time capsule for the families and clients I work with. It's not something that's easy to do or widely available, either.
Creating family films then, was more than just an opportunity to start a business, it really was a chance for me to offer women and families the experience to just be themselves and have something purposeful, meaningful and emotional to treasure. I find it truly joyful to capture the magic and human connection that's innately and fundamentally intertwined within the sense of family.
This certainly doesn't always have to be biological and it means many different things to people but truly, the sense of 'family' is majestic. My aim, therefore, is to capture that and how it manifests itself in the everyday. The little moments we so often take for granted. That is why I film and what my aim of each film is. To showcase that to clients and give them a sense of euphoria and pride in purely watching themselves just being, is a privilege and the reason why I do what I do.
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