Born in 1975. Began working as a freelance photographer in 2000. It has a wide range of shooting areas, including people, products, food, architecture, etc., and is compatible from Kanagawa prefecture all over the country, and even overseas.
At the beginning of my career as a cameraman, I spent about 10 years shooting for travel-related magazines, and when it was a travel-related shoot, it was like shooting almighty photographs in the form of people, food, and scenery...
Shooting in a field such as commercial photography was almost covered there, wasn't it?
After all, there were a lot of overseas jobs, so the equipment I could bring was limited, and since I didn't have time, there were a lot of challenging shoots like how fast and how clean I could shoot.
I did travel-related photography from my mid-twenties until around 40.
The university department I was studying at the time was like the Department of Psychology, but I really thought to myself, “I don't have much ahead even if I'm in this department.”
My part-time job at the time was a research laboratory. There are photographers and the like in the same workplace, aren't they? I was inspired by many things when I met a photographer, and I became interested in photography, and I began to look at photo magazines and advertisements.
At such a time, it became a story about leaving the university I attended at the time, and that was enough, I stopped it. I decided to try my hand at photography. I didn't have any money to go back to a new vocational school, so it was my first time to take the plunge and get hired by a studio that runs magazines and advertisements in Tokyo.
I only went there because I wanted to do something with photography, so I bought a camera after I got a job. Maybe it's Canon's EOS-1N.
At that time, I was often taking pictures with my friends. After all, I originally liked taking pictures of people.
It seems like they wrote “I want to be a salaryman” in a collection of essays when I was in elementary school. However, I think I probably wasn't thinking about anything at the time. However, I've been interested in hardware such as computers, video cameras, and cameras since I was a child.
Business photography is 100, isn't it? 100% corporate clients.
It's been about 20 years.
After all, isn't it best to hand over what you've taken to the client and make them happy? Or, after all, I'm happy that the photos I've taken are in the eyes of so many people. Also, I think I like the act of taking a picture itself.