
Question for Breakfast – my debut on television
Every story has a beginning.
My adventure with wedding photography began many years ago – with simple walks with a camera in hand and a great fascination with natural light and emotions between people. Since then I have come a long way, photographing hundreds of couples in love in all sorts of places, but one of them has always had a special meaning for me – the Tatra Mountains.
That’s why the invitation to the Question at Breakfast program was something really special for me. In the interview I had the opportunity to talk about what I love most – photography, love and mountains.
Talking about wedding sessions in the Tatra Mountains, I wanted to show more than just pretty frames. The mountains are demanding – changing weather, light that can disappear in a few minutes and space where you can’t fake anything. That’s why I appreciate so much the sessions realized right there. The Tatra Mountains naturally draw out emotions, sincerity and real reactions from people. It is a place where photographs are not created “by the way”, but are the result of a shared experience.
In the program, I also talked about what it’s like to work with couples who decide to do a wedding session in the mountains. It’s not a quick walk and a few “for Instagram” shots. It’s a process – talking, planning, adjusting the location and pace to the people I’m working with. Very often such sessions become a moment of respite for couples after the intense time of wedding preparations. A moment just for them.
The TV appearance itself was a completely new experience for me. Stress was mixed with excitement, but it soon became clear that the interview was going naturally – exactly the way I like to work every day. No script, no unnecessary poses, with an emphasis on authenticity. I was happy to be able to talk about photography in a calm and sincere way, without reducing it solely to aesthetics.
The material also featured Aga Gofron – a great photographer who has been creating very conscious and polished wedding sessions in the mountains. It was fun to appear on the program in such a group and show different perspectives on wedding photography in the Tatra Mountains. This only confirms that the mountains offer great possibilities and each photographer can tell the same space in his or her own, very individual way.
This material and this conversation were a symbolic moment for me. On the one hand, it summed up the path I’ve traveled as a wedding photographer, and on the other, it confirmed that it’s worth sticking to my own style and my own pace. To photograph people as they are, in places that matter to them.
If wedding sessions in the Tatra Mountains are close to you, and photography is supposed to be more than just a souvenir for you – this is exactly the direction my work goes.






