Featured Prints

A curated starting point for buyers who want confidence before they enquire.

Each featured work is framed through wall presence, room suitability, scale direction, and framing cues so the page behaves like a considered print edit rather than a catalogue wall.

This is the best route if you want to begin with resolved images that already represent the mood and restraint of the wider archive. It is intended for private buyers, designers, and specifiers who prefer fewer, stronger options.

Featured photographic work in an interior
Burnt Trunk Study

Surface & Detail

Burnt Trunk Study

A luminous bark study that carries the depth of timber, fire, and weathering without turning hard or heavy in a room.

Best scaleBest from medium to large format.
Framing cueWalnut, natural oak, or charcoal-stained timber.
Along the Murray I

River Study

Along the Murray I

A quieter horizontal composition for calmer rooms, long sightlines, and spaces that need atmosphere more than visual noise.

Best scalePerforms well as a wider statement print.
Framing cueDark timber, blackened oak, or soft natural oak.
Interior Placement Study

Homes & Interiors

Interior Placement Study

A room-led view that helps collectors and designers judge proportion, shadow, and how photographic work settles into domestic space.

Best scaleUseful as a placement and mood reference.
Framing cueMuseum-style mat with a restrained timber frame.
Facade Interval

Architectural Presence

Facade Interval

An architectural study with stronger edge rhythm for hallways, studies, and quieter commercial or hospitality placements.

Best scaleWorks well in vertical medium or large formats.
Framing cueSlim blackened timber or dark oak.

Room cues

Choose the work by how the room needs to feel.

Living rooms and long walls

Broader works with calm tonal transitions that can hold a room without making it feel visually crowded.

Entries, hallways, and thresholds

Architectural or vertical pieces that give immediate presence while staying quiet enough for transitional spaces.

Bedrooms, studies, and slower spaces

Lower-noise images, softer contrast, and material studies that reward closer, more private viewing.

Next step

Shortlist first. Commission only when the archive cannot answer the brief.

For many rooms, the strongest answer already exists in the archive. If not, the commission pathway lets the work begin from a particular place, memory, façade, or project context.