Photographing Spaces That Tell a Story
Among the many architectural and interior projects I’ve photographed throughout my career, my work has largely centered around collaborating with those who shape environments and translating space and light. These images created feel both precise and alive.
When I photograph I put my emotions, creativity and passion into each assignment. So at brightroomSF Studio, these projects are emotionally driven, creatively sharp, and passionately executed. In many ways, I’m capturing something that has already been carefully controlled and refined.
Gardens, however, play by a different set of rules.
Nature has natural cycles, but it doesn’t follow human timelines, production schedules, or client deadlines. You can’t “stage” a bloom or rush a season. Garden photography demands patience. You have to show up at the right moment sometimes after weeks or months of waiting but when everything aligns, the reward is incomparable.
Pink Flowering Dogwood spring colors, private garden in Silicon Valley, CA - © by brightroomSF Architectural Photography Studio, San Francisco 2026
A Personal Connection to Gardening
I think my appreciation for this comes from my father.
He’s an avid gardener, and some of my most grounding memories are the simplest ones: the two of us sitting in the dirt, quietly weeding for hours. No rush, no agenda just conversation, silence, and the slow rhythm of working with our hands. I still do this whenever I can while at back home.
As A.A. Milne puts it: “Weeds are flowers too, once you get to know them.” Dad often quotes the line of Alfred Austin about the general joy, too “The glory of gardening: hands in the dirt, head in the sun, heart with nature.” Perfect analogy.
Those lines always felt true but they resonate even more now.
Gardening, and even just being in a garden, is a quiet antidote.
There’s something deeply calming about it. Especially in times like these, when the world can feel loud, uncertain, and often defined by conflict and urgency. Stepping into a garden feels like stepping outside of that noise. The scale shifts. Time softens.
Flowering Dogwood (Cornus florida), Maple and Pink Kousa Dogwood (Cornus kousa 'Rosabella' or 'Satomi') spring colors, private garden in Silicon Valley, CA - © by brightroomSF Architectural Photography Studio, San Francisco 2026
A Silicon Valley Garden at Peak Spring Bloom
This perspective stayed with me during a recent garden photography project in Silicon Valley.
The goal was to capture the property at peak bloom, a narrow seasonal window that required precision timing. What I encountered was more than a designed landscape. It felt like a living, evolving ecosystem.
Every plant had been intentionally selected, yet the garden had reached a point where it thrived naturally, almost independently without any further landscaping. It no longer felt staged, it felt alive.
This is what makes garden photography so different from architectural or interior work. A building will largely look the same next month, next year. A garden is constantly evolving. What you capture today will never exist in quite the same way again.
It makes each image feel a little more fleeting and, in turn, more meaningful. A piece of recorded history in the flow of time.
A beautiful private garden with full spring colors in Silicon Valley, CA - © by brightroomSF Architectural Photography Studio, San Francisco 2026
Here in Northern California, the transition from March through May is something special.
Fall gets most of the attention for its dramatic colors, but spring, especially early spring, offers a different kind of richness. It’s layered, vibrant, and full of contrast. Fresh greens, soft blossoms, and unexpected bursts of color appear almost overnight.
This particular garden was a perfect example.
Pacific Dogwood (Cornus nuttallii) creamy-white colors, private garden in Silicon Valley, CA - © by brightroomSF Architectural Photography Studio, San Francisco 2026
The highlight was the bloom of the Pacific Dogwood (Cornus nuttallii), a species I usually associate with higher elevations like Yosemite National Park or Sequoia National Park. Seeing it here, integrated into a residential landscape, felt both surprising and grounding.
I also learned that its name has nothing to do with dogs and the term comes from “dagwood,” referencing the hardness of the wood once used to make tools and daggers. Historically, even the bark had practical use, brewed into tea during the Civil War as a substitute for quinine.
A beautiful private garden with full spring colors and a bridge in Silicon Valley, CA - © by brightroomSF Architectural Photography Studio, San Francisco 2026
Besides the creamy dogwood and warm colored Japanese Maples, the pink flowered Pink Flowering Dogwood (Cornus florida f. rubra) dominated the palette. This stunning small deciduous tree is known for its deep pink, pointed bracts in late spring.
Pink Flowering Dogwood against green maple leaves in a private garden in Silicon Valley, CA - © by brightroomSF Architectural Photography Studio, San Francisco 2026
As I moved through the space with my camera, something shifted.
That same feeling I remember from working in the garden with my dad came back. That quiet state of flow where time stretches and awareness sharpens. Hours passed quickly, but nothing felt rushed. I wasn’t just documenting the space I was experiencing it.
And maybe that’s the real connection between all of this.
In a world that often pulls us toward urgency and sometimes division, gardens remind us to slow down and try to live well together.
My profession is built on capturing permanence, they teach us to appreciate the temporary.
And in the middle of a busy, structured life, they offer a rare kind of presence.
Garden entrance to a visually pleasing March flower bloom in a private garden in Silicon Valley, CA - © by brightroomSF Architectural Photography Studio, San Francisco 2026
Finding Flow Through the Lens
By the end of the shoot, I had the images I came for along with a few unexpected drone perspectives that revealed the garden’s structure from above. But more than that, I left with a sense of calm that’s hard to manufacture elsewhere.
The homeowner gets to live in this space every day. For me, I was just passing through. But for a few hours, it felt like enough. Part of the reason I love my profession and enjoy the journey. I have the chance to own the space in which I am working in for those few hours.
Arial view with pool of a beautiful private garden with full spring colors in Silicon Valley, CA - © by brightroomSF Architectural Photography Studio, San Francisco 2026
A Final Thought: Why Gardens Matter
I hope you enjoyed these real life - and not AI generated :) -images from a colder climate or right from the warmth California.
If you find yourself overwhelmed by the pace or noise of the world, step into a garden, any garden. You might be surprised how quickly things come back into balance.
And if you happen to catch it between March and May, you’ll see it at one of its most quietly spectacular moments.
Detailed view of a private garden in Silicon Valley, CA - © by brightroomSF Architectural Photography Studio, San Francisco 2026
At BrightroomSF Studio, we are proud not to just document spaces but translating them into compelling visual narratives.
We partner with architects, interior designers, landscape architects and developers to elevate how their work is seen, understood, and remembered.
Our approach is collaborative, detail-driven, and fueled by genuine passion for the built environment.
The result: imagery that doesn’t just look good, it works for your brand.
brightroomSF is a San Francisco Bay Area - San Francisco and Oakland - based commercial, architectural and interior photography studio operated by Marcell Puzsar and his team. We help businesses to elevate their artistic visual representation to the highest standards on the web and other marketing materials. We have extensive experience to help our clients in Visual Storytelling, Commercial Photography, Aerial Photography and Video, Art Direction, Lifestyle photography, Architectural and Interior Photography Projects.
“Designed media for those who shape environments”
Aerial view of the private garden with full spring colors in Silicon Valley, CA - © by brightroomSF Architectural Photography Studio, San Francisco 2026
If you have an exciting commercial, architectural or design project to capture for marketing or advertising purposes we would love to help. Contact Marcell Puzsar at 415-489-8107 or Tarryn at 415-730-7149 or drop us an email via the Contact page. We would love to hear from you!