ABOUT THE FOUNDER

Learning to See While Learning to Listen

Ravi Valdiya, founder of Cedar Cones Studios, documentary photographer and filmmaker

“The field taught me to photograph. Photography taught me to see the field.”

I’m Ravi Valdiya — a documentary filmmaker, photographer, and educator based in Delhi. But the path here was anything but direct.
I started my career as a software engineer in Bangalore in 2007. A few months later, almost by accident, two things entered my life simultaneously — volunteering with NGOs and photography. At the time they felt like entirely separate pursuits. One was about people and purpose. The other was about light and landscape.

Then a mentor changed everything. Prarthana Unkalkar Kaul — then Regional Head at iVolunteer Bangalore, an organisation that bridges passionate individuals with credible non-profits, and today Co-Founder and Director of GiftAbled — first opened the door to the social sector for me. She introduced me to different causes, helped me understand the intricacies of how NGOs work, and then — having noticed my photography — gently pushed me toward something I hadn’t considered: using my skills in service of organisations that needed them but couldn’t pay for them. I was hesitant. But I tried it, and something clicked. Not just technically — something about the way I understood both the field and the frame changed when they worked together.

Over the years that followed, the two grew in parallel. The more time I spent in the field — across disability, child rights, education, environment, and rural livelihoods — the more clearly I understood what an image needed to say. Photography came first, and as the stories grew more complex, videography became an equally essential part of the language. A still could hold a moment. A film could hold a journey.

Teaching entered the picture in a similar way — organically, through the field. My first classes were fundraisers for non-profits. Then came workshops with hearing-impaired communities. Gradually, teaching photography became its own professional thread — one that eventually led to a visiting faculty role at AAFT (Asian Academy of Film and Television), Noida, and my current role as visiting faculty at the Delhi School of Photography.

Along the way I learned American Sign Language and was entrusted with the responsibility of trusteeship at GiftAbled Foundation — a recognition I hold with deep respect. More than credentials, though, what the field gave me was an understanding that is harder to articulate but easier to see in the work: where to draw a line, how to be genuinely respectful to beneficiaries and underprivileged communities, how to document organically without imposing a narrative, and how to earn the kind of trust that allows real stories — not performed ones — to emerge. That quality of presence in the field, I believe, is not something you can learn from a camera manual. It comes from years of simply showing up — as a volunteer, a listener, and eventually, a filmmaker.

By 2014 I was taking professional photography assignments. In 2019 I came out of corporate life entirely — and within months, Cedar Cones Studios was founded. Not as a pivot. But as the natural shape a decade of parallel learning had taken.
When I walk into a field assignment today, I bring both — the filmmaker’s eye and the field person’s understanding. They are not two separate things I have combined. They grew as one.

Our story

Cedar Cones Studios is a documentary filmmaking and photography practice currently based in Delhi, with roots in Bangalore, working at the intersection of visual storytelling and social impact.

We collaborate with NGOs, institutions, and organisations to document human stories, social realities, and meaningful change — translating field experience into narratives that foster empathy and understanding. Every project begins with listening and observing before the camera comes out. What we aim to capture is not just events and activities, but the human experiences, emotions, and realities that lie beneath them.
Founded in 2019, Cedar Cones works across documentary films, photography, and visual storytelling workshops — always with the belief that a story told with dignity travels further than one told with spectacle.

Our approach

Our work is grounded in documentary practice and guided by a commitment to ethical storytelling. We believe that stories about people and communities should be represented with respect, honesty, and sensitivity.

Rather than focusing only on the technical aspects of filmmaking or photography, our approach emphasizes time spent in the field—observing, engaging, and building trust with the people whose stories are being documented.

This field-based perspective allows us to create narratives that feel authentic and nuanced. Every story is approached with the understanding that visual documentation carries responsibility: to represent people with dignity and to avoid oversimplifying complex realities.

Let’s work together

If you have a story, project, or initiative that deserves thoughtful documentation, we would love to collaborate and bring it to life.