About me
Hi, I'm NoctiVision — a high school student and a quiet photographer who finds peace in stillness.
I love capturing moments when the world feels silent: the calm before dawn, the glow of city lights through the mist, or the endless expanse beneath a sky full of stars.
I shoot mostly with my Canon EOS 80D.
It's not the newest camera, but it has been with me through countless nights and changing seasons.
Over time, I've come to believe that light shapes the picture, but color gives it a soul.
Colors speak quietly — through contrast, balance, and restraint — defining the emotional weight of an image far more than sharpness ever could.
My editing approach is restrained and cinematic.
I avoid high saturation, letting contrast and tone carry the mood instead.
I often work with strong complementary colors, balancing warmth and coolness to create subtle tension and atmosphere.
Every curve I adjust, every hue I shift, is a step toward finding that fragile space between realism and emotion.
In the past, I used to shoot in bursts, trying to capture everything at once.
But after a few quiet walks in nature, I changed.
Now I shoot mostly in one-shot mode — it slows me down, lets me breathe, observe, and reflect before pressing the shutter.
Photography, for me, has become less about freezing motion and more about understanding it.
Lately, my passion for astrophotography has grown stronger.
I spend long nights beneath the stars, processing images in Siril, tracing the faint light of distant nebulae and galaxies.
There's something humbling about photographing the night sky — it reminds me how small we are, yet how much beauty can exist within a single frame.
I mostly focus on still images rather than video, because a photograph can preserve a moment with unmatched clarity and depth — a piece of time distilled into one frame.
It allows me to capture not just what I see, but what I feel.
The name NoctiVision comes from the idea of seeking light within darkness.
It's also inspired by the Nikon 58mm f/0.95 Noct, a lens I admire for its artistry and emotion.
Even though I don't use it, it represents what I love most about photography — the pursuit of light, meaning, and quiet beauty.
To me, photography isn't just about taking pictures.
It's about listening to the world, telling silent stories, and remembering what it feels like to be alive — in one fleeting, irreplaceable moment.