Photographs from places I've lived and traveled through — Jordan, Qatar, Turkey, Saudi Arabia. I don't shoot for the subject as much as for the feeling I had when I was standing there. Every frame here has a small story behind it.
I took this in my grandfather's garden in Jordan last summer. He passed two years ago, but his house still feels like him. Every time I walk past the garden I think about him, so I stopped and shot this flower. It felt like a small way to keep him close.
We were having lunch at Souq Waqif with my family when this cat sat down next to us like it owned the place. My dad started feeding it from his plate. I picked up my camera because of the way it was sitting, and now the photo isn't really about the cat. It's about that evening with my family.
I was visiting a friend in Maraş in Turkey and we were walking through the old market after some rain. These two ducks stood face to face on the wet stones like they were in the middle of an argument. It made me laugh, so I caught it before they walked off.
I was reading Qur'an when this verse stopped me: «إِلَّا الَّذِينَ آمَنُوا وَعَمِلُوا الصَّالِحَاتِ فَلَهُمْ أَجْرٌ غَيْرُ مَمْنُونٍ» — “Except those who believe and do good deeds; for them is a reward never ending.” It reminded me that no good thing you do ever goes to waste. I took the photo so I wouldn't forget how that moment felt.
A friend told me about this crystal artwork set into the ground on the island, so I went to see it for the first time. I've always liked modern art, and the way the light broke across all those tiny stones made it look almost alive. I shot it fast before the light moved.
This camel was sitting in Wadi Rum in Jordan and let me get really close. For me a camel isn't just an animal, it stands for patience and pride, the things I grew up hearing about. The empty desert behind it made it look even bigger.
When Al Khor Park first opened I went straight there because I love being around animals. This white peacock spread its feathers right in front of me and I kind of froze. I shot it through the fence wires, and somehow that made it feel even more like a secret.
My friends here always dragged me out to spots like this one. That morning the fog was so thick you could barely see, and this one bent tree was standing by itself in the middle of it. Something about how alone it looked made me stop and take the picture.
I shot this at night on campus. I had to hold my breath and stay frozen because it was night mode and the smallest movement ruins the shot. I probably looked weird standing dead still in the dark, but I wanted the way the branches open up to the sky.
We drove out to the southern desert in Jordan one night. The sky was completely clear, packed with stars, and the air was cold and quiet in a way the city never is. I rested the camera on something solid and tried to get the tree with everything behind it.
I took this at the aquarium in Old Doha Port. These eels were knotted around an old ship's wheel and the blue light pulled out every pattern on their skin. I stood there a while just finding all the small details before I took the shot.
This is from Madinah in Saudi Arabia. I looked up and saw these giant umbrellas opening against the sky, and the gaps between them looked like flowers. Standing under them is a calm, heavy kind of feeling, and I wanted to hold on to it.
This cat showed up at my grandfather's house in Jordan when she was tiny and just never left. She grew up with us and turned into part of the family. I caught her on the floor one afternoon, half asleep, looking at me like she runs the place.
New Year's night is one of my favorite nights of the year. People were everywhere, all looking up, and then “2025” lit up the whole sky. To me it wasn't just a number. It felt like a sign for new dreams, new challenges, and new stories coming.
A campaign concept I designed to celebrate Jordanian cultural identity, themed for the Jordan Tourism Board. The idea was simple: remind people that heritage doesn't fade, it keeps inspiring the people who come after it.
I turned one of my own photos into a poster and paired it with a line from my favorite writer, Dostoevsky: “To live without hope is to stop living.” The long corridor felt like the road back to something you lost, so the quote fit it perfectly.
All of these photos and videos are available in their original resolution on OneDrive. Open the folder to view or download the originals.