
CANADIAN
ARMED_FORCES
I recently shot a concert for the Canadian Armed Forces using a streamlined, one-person setup: a single camera, one zoom lens, and an external recorder with a mic directly connected. I didn’t bring any heavy lighting gear—just the essentials to stay mobile and unobtrusive while capturing the event. Normally, a shoot like this would take a full crew with multiple cameras, dedicated audio techs, and a bulkier lighting setup—but I pulled it off solo, proving that sometimes less really is more.
INNOVATION_TECHNOLOGIES
PHOENNIX
In 2021, I collaborated with Phoennix Innovation Technologies, a rubber regeneration facility based in Mirabel. My role was to grasp their complex chemical process and distill it into a clear, compelling visual narrative. Over the course of three focused and rewarding days, we carefully crafted a product video that continues to resonate with both investors and scientists around the globe, drawing attention to Phoennix’s groundbreaking approach to rubber regeneration.
SUTTON
REAL_ESTATE
I put together a real estate video for a friend at Sutton—not a flashy gig, but the property itself was genuinely awe-inspiring. Surrounded by nature and full of character, it felt almost otherworldly. I leaned into that feeling, giving the house an ethereal quality through carefully chosen music and in-camera color settings. No drone shots needed, just letting the place speak for itself with the right mood and a thoughtful touch.
in collaboration with_cinéquinox
TEDx laval
Back in 2019, I teamed up with the folks at Cinequinox to cover a TEDx event—an experience that taught me a lot about collaboration and scale. Working alongside a four-person production team, I absorbed the flow, structure, and division of roles that go into a larger shoot. It was a crash course in coordination, and it helped me refine my own one-man-band approach.

énergie
cardio
What to say about Énergie Cardio? Throughout the company’s ups and downs, my two-year contribution saw me navigating shoots with hundreds of on-location extras, shifting deadlines and priorities, and even a global pandemic.
The company was fortunate to have solid budgetary flexibility—but I made it a point to prove that, once again, sometimes less is truly more.