Director • Creative Director • Producer
Tiffany × Frankenstein brought together heritage and myth in collaboration with Tiffany & Co. and Netflix for Guillermo del Toro’s Frankenstein.
I directed and produced the Kate Hawley and Tiffany Archives sequences staged inside Tiffany’s headquarters, building a cinematic environment where history and storytelling could coexist.
Rather than treat the archives as a museum, I approached them as a living space. Working closely with Tiffany’s team, we constructed a reimagined archive setting within HQ. The space was designed and lit so that glass, gemstones and artifacts felt suspended between memory and modernity.
The intention was not documentation. It was resurrection.
In collaboration with costume designer Kate Hawley and Tiffany’s archivists, we created a world that felt aligned with del Toro’s visual language. Louis Comfort Tiffany’s glass, heritage pieces and archival sketches became characters within the frame.





Alongside the archive sequences, we documented the workshop process. Artisans filed, engraved and set stones destined for the film. These moments reflected the central idea of Frankenstein: creation as devotion, craft as transformation.


This project sits at the intersection of cinema and design, where heritage becomes narrative and light becomes architecture.
