Skip to content

Buy any Pair & Get a 2nd Half Price | Discount applied in basket

Viewfinder: Gstee

Viewfinder: Gstee

In this week’s Viewfinder, and to coincide with World Ocean Day, we sat down with Cornwall-based photographer Gstee (@gstee). Known for his striking aerial imagery, Gstee captures the natural world in a way that reveals patterns, textures, and moments that are often overlooked from the ground. Through his work, he encourages a fresh appreciation for the seascapes around us.

What's your story?

I got into photography while I was working as a touring live sound engineer, and searching for a bit of balance. Spending so much time in loud, hectic environments made me truly appreciate the calm of Cornwall whenever I came home. The quiet coastlines, sunrises and sunsets, and time in and around the ocean.

With a family background in aviation, I was lucky enough to go flying and experience aerial perspectives from a young age, seeing the landscape from above. That perspective has always fascinated me. Gstee originally started as a playful creative escape for the moments in-between gigs as a way of reconnecting to this, but over time it’s become a way of sharing an often unseen, impermanent perspective of the natural world and bring the calm of it into peoples homes.

Tell us about 5 of your favourite images



Forgotten Dreams

This is probably my favourite image I’ve ever taken. I shot it close to home at the edge of a tidal estuary, during a small window before this sand island disappeared beneath the incoming tide. Watching the water interact with the sand felt like a dance between the waves and the shifting tide. It was one of those moments where everything aligned perfectly for just a few minutes.

 

To The Sea

I took this at my local surf break during winter a few years ago while experimenting with the movement and energy of both the waves and the surfers in the cold water. It’s one of the few images I’ve shot that isn’t taken directly from above, and I think that shift in perspective gives it something unique. It’s one of those photographs I know I’d never be able to recreate in exactly the same way, and that unpredictability is what I love most about shooting the ocean.

 

Volcan

This was the shot from that super windy and risky moment in the Canary Islands. Thankfully, the images made it back in one piece. It was one of my first times shooting landscapes like this rather than the ocean and I remember being drawn to the contrast in the volcanic terrain. It felt like I was capturing something otherworldly and a completely different energy and environment to what I’d shot before.

 

Lone Surfer

This image came from one of my very first shoots using a drone. It actually sat dormant on my computer for quite a while before I rediscovered it, and when I came back to it I instantly fell in love with it all over again. What draws me to the photo is the way the stormy sky reflects back onto the surface of the ocean, almost blending sea and sky into one. The lone surfer in the frame gives a real sense of scale and solitude.

 

Break

‘Break’ is a fairly new image and what I love about it is how it seems to hold so many different states of movement within a single frame. For me, it captures that constant ebb and flow between calm and chaos; the way the ocean can feel both powerful and peaceful at exactly the same time.


What's the weirdest or wildest thing that's happened on a shoot?

Nothing too outrageous thankfully! A few years ago I was shooting in the Canary Islands and launched the drone from the top of a volcano in seriously heavy wind. It definitely felt like one of those moments where I thought, “this thing might be disappearing forever.”, but I knew the perspective was going to be epic. Thankfully, it survived, and the photos ended up being worth it.


What's a must-have item you can't live without on a shoot?

I mean… sunglasses feels like the dangerously obvious answer, but genuinely, a good pair is essential. My work involves flying drones mostly over water in bright conditions, so being able to actually keep sight of it in the sky is pretty important. Other than that, probably good coffee!

 

A huge thank you to Gstee for taking part in this edition of our Viewfinder series. Keep up with Gstee and his work by heading to his handle @gstee or wesbite. If you'd like to take part in our Viewfinder series, please get in touch at hey@tenslife.com for more info.