“The meeting of two worlds is always a negotiation.”
The most interesting photographs happen at boundaries. These images live at the edge where human construction and natural growth overlap.

Threshold
A doorway or an edge — this image sits at the boundary between the enclosed and the open. The built element frames a slice of the natural world beyond.

Overgrown
Nature does not rush, but it is relentless. Given enough time it will find every surface, every gap. This image is about patience winning over permanence.

Coexistence
Neither the building nor the landscape dominates this frame — they share it. That negotiation, that mutual tolerance, is what drew me to press the shutter.

Edge of the Wild
Standing at the boundary where the managed landscape gives way to something untamed. The composition holds both worlds in a single frame without choosing between them.

Parallel Lines
The built and the grown run side by side here, neither yielding. Two systems of order — one engineered, one organic — sharing the same frame in uneasy harmony.

Broken Line
Where a wall ends and the forest begins — a straight line interrupted by organic growth. The contradiction is the subject: geometry surrendering to entropy.

Intersection
Where two systems meet and neither wins. The line between human order and natural process becomes a subject in itself.

Suture
A seam where the built and the grown have been stitched together by time. Neither can be separated now — they are one tissue.

Borrowed Light
Light that enters through gaps, bounces off surfaces, and arrives secondhand. The most beautiful illumination is often indirect.

Current
Energy moving through fixed structures — the invisible forces that animate the built world, caught in a single frame.

Overlap
Two systems occupying the same visual space — the built line and the grown line crossing without acknowledging each other.