
Underwater photography
Beneath the surface, everything changes — sound fades, light bends, and time seems to slow down. Underwater photography is a balance between technique and instinct, between breath and silence.
At shallow depths, light plays with the colors of corals and the silver flashes of fish. Deeper, around 40 to 60 meters, the world turns blue and cold, and every movement becomes deliberate. Down there, wrecks rest like sleeping giants, covered with life, silent witnesses of another time.
The ocean is full of encounters — reef sharks gliding in the current, manta rays dancing in circles, whale sharks passing like shadows, and dolphins cutting through the light. Each dive is different, unpredictable, and never fully understood.
Photographing underwater means chasing light where it barely exists, finding beauty in the stillness, and realizing that the sea holds both the greatest calm and the greatest power on Earth.
























