Photography is a language. I will teach you the grammar. The voice is yours.
In-person photography classes in & around Cambridge - for beginners, improvers, & photographers who want to go further.
Not sure where to start?
Discover Intentional Photography
Finding Focus One-To-One
Not sure where to start? Begin with this one-hour one-to-one introductory session to assess your current level and your learning goals. The cost is also fully redeemable against your Foundations booking.
One-To-One Foundations
One-to-one tuition is the most direct route to progress. No fixed pace, no group dynamic, no waiting for others to catch up or feeling left behind. Just your photography, your questions, and your creative development.
Foundations Group Course
Three sessions of two hours each, in-person in and around Cambridge. Classes are intentionally limited to four students allowing for focussed attention in every session and space to ask questions.
One-To-One Masterclasses
These bespoke Masterclasses are for photographers who already understand their camera and want to develop something more elusive: consistency, intention, and a genuine photographic voice. Sessions by arrangement.
Intentional Photography and the AICR method - A different kind of photography education
Photography culture can be unnecessarily intimidating. The obsession with equipment specifications, mega-pixel count, and the unspoken hierarchies of gear and genre put many people off before they've even begun — and disproportionately so for people who've been told, either implicitly or explicitly, that technical subjects aren't for them.
I have taught all kinds of photographers - from complete beginners to the more experienced - how to take control of their cameras to more confidently make the photographs they had imagined, and to better express their own unique voices.
That’s why I teach the principles of intentional photography and why I developed my AICR method - Attention, Intention, Creation, Reflection. The equipment is just a tool, a means to an end, it should serve the photographer, not the other the way around.

