Editorial photography has long been shaped by conventions that helped define its role: to inform, to document, to attract attention. Every generation inherits the responsibility to question those visual habits and find new ways of engaging with the reader. Giovanni approaches editorial work as a space where journalism, aesthetics and experimentation coexist without contradiction. Rather than illustrating a story, he seeks to create images that become part of it, photographs capable of slowing the reader down, provoking curiosity and extending the experience beyond the written page. His practice moves through composition, light, gesture and perspective, transforming familiar subjects into something that earns a second look. The intention is not to challenge editorial conventions for their own sake, but to expand what they allow, building visual narratives that remain accessible while opening new ways of seeing. In an age of endless scrolling, the challenge is no longer simply to accompany a story. It is to create images that give people a reason to stop, to observe and to return to the page.