Making Things
Worth Watching

Visual thinking isn’t a skill I learned at a desk. It’s something I’ve been practicing for over fifteen years — in alleyways, on rooftops, across countries — and it’s what I bring into every brand, campaign, and space I direct.

The Foundation

It started with a Nikon D70 my grandfather gave me in middle school. No tutorials, no formal training — just a camera and the instinct to point it at things that felt worth keeping. That early habit of looking, framing, and deciding what matters inside a rectangle never left me. It became the foundation of how I think about every creative project I work on, regardless of the medium or industry.

Kodak Ektar H35 Review Intro Bridging analog nostalgia with modern storytelling. A long-form visual review that organically engaged 50,000+ viewers through authentic aesthetic and pacing.

Filmmaking & Motion — 2012–2017

Before brand strategy and business, I was a filmmaker, art director and VFX artist. I directed fashion films for emerging Vietnamese designers, created motion content for clients including the BraveBits, Showbox Singapore, National Economics University,.. This period shaped how I approach storytelling: not as decoration, but as a system — where every frame, cut, and color decision serves a larger emotional arc.

It also gave me something most creative directors don’t have: I understand the full production pipeline from pre-production to post. When I direct, I’m not guessing what’s possible — I know exactly what it takes to execute.

Working with early-career designers taught me something that still defines how I work: the most effective creative direction is the kind that makes someone else’s vision more fully itself, not a version of yours.

Godox Lux Senior — Brand Partnership
Commissioned cinematic review

Commissioned promotional video
for Freepik’s stock video & sound collection.

Sony ZV-E10 — Brand Partnership
Commissioned cinematic review

Motion graphics & visual effects production
Template & asset marketplace.

HOFAP Magazine

Long before “User-Generated Content” became a marketing buzzword, I built a community around it.

HOFAP started as a simple question: what if there was a space in Vietnam where people who cared about photography could share work and push each other forward? It became a community of over 70,000 people across Vietnam, Taiwan, and Thailand. I defined the aesthetic direction, editorial voice, and visual standards for the platform — and created the hashtag #hofotd, which organically generated over 20,000 community-submitted images.

What HOFAP taught me about creative direction: you don’t lead by controlling output. You lead by setting a visual language clear enough that others can create within it — and want to.

Cinematic Content

Photography and filmmaking have never been work I put down when the business started. They’re the constant — the practice that keeps my technical instincts sharp and my aesthetic sensibility honest.

I shoot on RED and Sony, grade everything carefully, and publish on YouTube when a piece of work earns it. A Kodak camera review reached 50,000+ views. A travel film from Phu Quoc pulled 15,000+ — both long-form pieces, over ten minutes, made without a team or a budget. Just a point of view and the patience to execute it properly.

I also teach occasionally — workshops on shooting and composition for beginners — which forces me to articulate why visual decisions work, not just that they do. It’s the best way I know to stay honest about craft.

Vinwonders
Aquarium

Louis Vuitton
Visionary Journey

The problem is you
think you have time.

Lotte world
AQUARIUM

Phu Quoc
Night market

Mustang Blu
Boutique hotel

Linh Loong
Pre-wedding

Native Instincts
Fashion Film

SOL Flora
Brand Reels