Storm Foam studies the narrow, irregular line where ocean water pulls back across wet sand.
The photograph is graphic and textural, with bright foam cutting through a darker field of reflective shoreline. Its contrast is subtle but strong — a natural mark created by water, movement, and tide.
Medium: Acrylic photographic print
Presentation: 1/4" frameless acrylic with white vinyl backing
Edges: Hand-polished, crystal-clear edges
Finish: Glossy dimensional surface
Hanging: French cleat backing for easy, secure installation
Orientation: Vertical
Collection: Storm Tide
This piece stands on its own, but is also part of the four-work Storm Tide collection — designed to create a more expansive, collected installation when shown together.
Storm Tide is a limited edition photography collection shaped by coastal weather — wet sand, softened skies, wind-brushed water, sea foam, and the reflective stillness that follows rain. Moody, tonal, and cinematic, the collection studies the Outer Banks shoreline in the moments after weather moves through: light breaking through cloud cover, water gathering across sand, reeds standing against the sky, and tide lines drawn by the ocean.
Storm Foam studies the narrow, irregular line where ocean water pulls back across wet sand.
The photograph is graphic and textural, with bright foam cutting through a darker field of reflective shoreline. Its contrast is subtle but strong — a natural mark created by water, movement, and tide.
Medium: Acrylic photographic print
Presentation: 1/4" frameless acrylic with white vinyl backing
Edges: Hand-polished, crystal-clear edges
Finish: Glossy dimensional surface
Hanging: French cleat backing for easy, secure installation
Orientation: Vertical
Collection: Storm Tide
This piece stands on its own, but is also part of the four-work Storm Tide collection — designed to create a more expansive, collected installation when shown together.
Storm Tide is a limited edition photography collection shaped by coastal weather — wet sand, softened skies, wind-brushed water, sea foam, and the reflective stillness that follows rain. Moody, tonal, and cinematic, the collection studies the Outer Banks shoreline in the moments after weather moves through: light breaking through cloud cover, water gathering across sand, reeds standing against the sky, and tide lines drawn by the ocean.