Residential interior photography for designers, architects, and custom home builders, focused on material, craftsmanship, and the defining details of a home. These images highlight finishes, millwork, and architectural elements that shape each space.
Residential interiors are rarely photographed in perfectly controlled environments. Most of the homes and spaces I document are lived in, which means the process often involves refining what already exists while respecting the people who inhabit the space.
Photographing these environments is a collaborative process. Interior designers, architects, builders, and cabinet makers each bring a different understanding of the space, and working together helps ensure the imagery reflects both the design intent and the way people naturally live within it.
Preparing a space for photography is an active process. Furniture may be repositioned, objects introduced or removed, and elements of the room adjusted to create clarity within the frame. The goal is never to redesign the space, but to shape a moment that reveals the materials, craftsmanship, and atmosphere that define the home.
When these elements come together, the images move beyond documenting a finished project and begin to suggest the life of the space itself. Those moments often form the foundation of stronger editorial imagery, helping designers and makers present their work in a way that resonates with publications, portfolios, and future clients.
Many of the interiors I photograph are created by designers and makers working throughout Toronto, Ottawa, and the Greater Toronto Area, with projects often located in rural homes, lakeside properties, and countryside settings across Ontario. This work often connects closely with both architecture photography and commercial interior photography, where the same attention to light, material, and experience carries across different types of spaces.
A clear, step-by-step guide for architects, interior designers, and custom homebuilders who want to get their projects in front of the right editors.
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Step-by-step
Submission Process
Find the right publications in Canada & Ontario
Most architects and interior designers finish a project, post a few images, and move on. This article breaks down why that's a missed opportunity and how to start getting your work in front of Canadian editors, award panels, and the publications your clients actually read.
Get Published Workbook
Still images document a project, but video brings it to life. By adding motion, pacing, and perspective, you can communicate the experience of a space in a way that feels more immersive and engaging.
adding video
Creating content without a plan often leads to scattered results. This blueprint focuses on building a structured approach that helps you create with intention, stay consistent, and develop a library of visuals that supports your work over time.
Planning Content
Cost-sharing is a simple way to get more out of your investment in photography and video. By collaborating with other contributors on a project, you can reduce costs, streamline the process, and create a cohesive set of visuals that benefits everyone involved.
COST-sharing
Real experiences create something staged content cannot. When people interact naturally with a space, product, or service, the result is imagery that feels lived in, relatable, and far more meaningful to your audience.
Real Experiences