Feeding the Future | Ellen MacArthur Foundation (2023)

An observational documentary that follows the collaborative partnership of a baker and a farmer taking back control of the food system from the inside out. Forming part of a series of films profiling regenerative farmers in the British Isles, Feeding the Future takes us on a journey of transformation via a story of wheat grown on a farm in Somerset. Fred the farmer tells his story of how he transformed the traditional farm he inherited from working against nature in a global food system, to working with it—bringing life back to the farm, the soil, and the community that it feeds.

Soil to Soil | Ellen MacArtur Foundation (2023)

An observational documentary that follows the life and livelihood of a wool farmer in County Kilkenny. Forming part of a series of films profiling regenerative farmers in the British Isles, Soil to Soil tells the story of Suzanna Crampton, a blanket designing Shepard farming with nature to regenerate soils and biodiversity. 

 
 

Reconnecting Fashion to Farming | South West England Fibreshed (2021)

By reconnecting ‘fashion’ with farming, we are building bioregional systems for clothing production that can nourish, rather than exhaust, our communities and biosphere. We went on the road to meet some of our local fibre farmers and processors in the South West of England, and better understand the natural fibre industry that lies on our own doorstep.

Bubbled (2021)

A metaphorical play on the restricted reality of being locked away from our 'normal' lives during the Covid 19 global pandemic. Togetherness and isolation oscillate throughout this cinematic exploration of space and relationships, our inside and outside worlds and where there is tension when we look at them too closely. The film takes viewers on a journey that is, at its core, personal but also universal in its treatment of personal relationships and self-discovery.

 
 

On-Sea - MA Visual Anthropology thesis film, Goldsmiths University (2016)

On-sea is set on the Bush Estate at Eccles-on-sea in Norfolk (UK). Candid and direct, the film is about landscape and daily life minutiae that celebrate Englishness. Through a series of intimate scenes, a portrait of the community emerges in its full human and natural beauty. The film’s pace adjusts to the tempo of the community.