Why I Started Vulturx
Vulturx began as a curated repost project. In everyday life, I found myself drawn to visual scenes across Europe and the Mediterranean — where beauty, lifestyle, and atmosphere felt intentional rather than performative. As I looked deeper, I discovered repost pages that archived these moments, and I wanted to approach that idea with more care.
Rather than simply reposting, Vulturx was built as an elevated form of curation. Every image, video, and reference was selected with attention to mood, quality, and context. Credits are always given, but the focus was on refinement — transforming scattered visuals into a cohesive archive shaped by taste, music, location, and rhythm. Over time, this evolved into remixing and re-editing content, not just collecting it, creating a distinct point of view rather than repetition.
On Observation and Taste
Observation has always come naturally to me. Whether it’s beauty, landscape, architecture, or lifestyle, I’m drawn to details that feel composed, quiet, and intentional. Taste, to me, is not excess — it’s selection.
Vulturx reflects a distinct sensibility: Parisian chicness, Eastern European elegance, and modern luxury seen in places like Monaco, Dubai, and the Mediterranean. The project isn’t about showcasing wealth or glamour for its own sake, but about recognizing atmosphere, proportion, and visual balance — the moments that feel timeless rather than loud.
Building Slowly
Vulturx is built with patience. Finding its identity took time, and past mistakes came from rushing, forcing outcomes, or chasing momentum too quickly. That urgency no longer serves the work.
This project is intended to grow gradually — through observation, consistency, and clarity of vision. By moving slowly, Vulturx remains flexible, honest, and intentional. Longevity matters more than immediacy, and meaning matters more than scale.
“Beauty has no nationality.” @lancommme