Building a new identity required deep, consistent field documentation. For four years, I’ve been embedded with La Thuile’s communication team and I’ve harvested stories and imagery across all seasons. La Thuile (Aosta Valley) shifted from a ski resort to a year-round destination of wilderness and connection. This is the result of long-term strategic storytelling in the trenches. The mission was to show the landscape’s vast, luxury of space where the traveler feels welcomed and embraced, not overwhelmed.



My photography has been featured in prestigious publications such as Stil’é (Il Sole 24 Ore), capturing the essence of La Thuile.
Beyond the page, I’ve worked on-site with tourism entities to transform these narratives into essential visual materials, from event posters and brochures to local maps.

My vlogs aren’t just vlogs; they are a record of human endurance and connection with the mountain. Filming while climbing Monte Rosa required me to be an “embedded creator”—balancing technical alpinism with real-time storytelling. It captures the raw struggle and the emotional transformation that happens above 4,000 meters.

I directed the creation of a refuge map designed as a table placemat for hikers in the Val di Susa (Piedmont). My role was to manage the relationships with the local mountain hut owners and to guide the graphic designer to ensure the final product met high aesthetic standards. It was a job of synthesis — managing logistics, people, and design to turn a practical need into a physical object you now find on tables across the valley.
I have developed the sensitivity to spot and capture the silent connections between people. My goal is never to “stage” a scene, but to be present enough to witness it. By documenting these authentic human transformations as they happen, I create emotional content that doesn’t just show a project, but defines its soul.



For a closer look at my aesthetic and storytelling method: