I've always loved being behind the camera. I like how it sets you apart in the crowd, so you can "float" on the edges, occasionally stopping to capture a moment.
Documentary photography (like cinematography, for that matter) is a cruel, ironic art I would say. You're basically capturing the present in an instant, giving birth to a moment... that should have evaporated in the past and should exist only in memories, seen through the fog of the events that followed.
Photographs force us to see people before the future embraces them, they allow us to freeze a moment that has passed forever, impossible to reproduce. And precisely by freezing it, all the photographs testify to the tireless melting of time. Sometimes all you can take are memories, but if you're lucky enough to surprise the moment, then he will live forever.
Time travel has always existed, just in the past , through the photos and videos that each of us has at our fingertips today. The problem is, there are so many that most will never see the light of day again. This is the compromise of a digital generation.
This is how this website was born, from the need to find a place where I can gather everything the moments together. A place where all the family memories, places and people we love in our lives can live on in harmony. So, I invite you on a journey through time, with memories of good days in our lives. If you're reading these lines, you're probably already part of our family or a dear friend.
Carpe diem!