There’s a version of Paris the tourists never see. It exists for maybe an hour, sometimes less, in the space between night and morning when the streets are empty and the light is almost blue. Then the limestone starts to warm. Lampposts flicker off one by one. A café owner drags chairs onto the sidewalk. Somewhere a shutter opens and the smell of butter drifts into the street. This is Paris at its most unguarded, and it’s the most beautiful version of the city there is.
This collection was born in that hour. Sacré-Cœur in early fog. Iron balconies lined with geraniums. The curve of a bridge reflected in still water. A woman reading at a bistro table before the lunch rush, a painter squinting at the light along the quai, the particular lean of a Parisian lamppost that manages to be both functional and sculptural at once. Every illustration carries the soft, atmospheric quality of a city waking up slowly, still half-dreaming, not yet performing for anyone.
Paris at Dawn is an invitation to see the city the way it sees itself. Not grand or theatrical, but quietly, impossibly elegant. The architecture, the café culture, the flowers and the light and the lived-in beauty of a place that has been loved for centuries and somehow still has secrets left to share.
















































































