New York CNN  — 

For photographer Landon Nordeman, finding beauty in the everyday is a full-time job. So, it’s no surprise that his hometown of New York provides an endless source of creative and personal inspiration.

“I love people and I love just seeing out on the street a gesture, a flash of color, the way someone’s leaning against a bus stop or an umbrella opening and passing by you,” he said. “Just these little daily life moments that happen in New York, that somehow I just am forever intoxicated by.”

Landon Nordeman
The Archbishop of Newark, pictured in the center. Taken near to 5th Avenue hours before Pope Francis made his appearance in 2015.
Landon Nordeman
Easter Sunday on 5th Avenue in 2015.
Landon Nordeman
Street style captured at New York Fashion Week in Sept. 2014.
Landon Nordeman
Easter Sunday on 5th Avenue in 2015.
Landon Nordeman
Pedestrians take pictures of a male peacock that escaped from the Central Park Zoo as it perched on a window ledge in 2011.
Landon Nordeman
Women walking on East 52nd Street in 2016.
Landon Nordeman
Scenes from the annual Met Gala in 2017.
Landon Nordeman
A woman wearing scuba gear, including yellow flippers, walks across 46th street in Times Square in 2004.
Landon Nordeman
Easter Sunday on 5th Avenue in 2015.
Landon Nordeman/Landon Nordeman/Landon Nordeman
A man rides to work on the Staten Island Ferry in 2002.
Landon Nordeman
The Highline in New York City in 2011.
Landon Nordeman
Taken after a cat show on in 2015, near the Algonquin Hotel.
Landon Nordeman
Scenes from New York Fashion Week in 2015.
Landon Nordeman
Street scenes around Central Park before Pope Francis arrived in 2015.
Landon Nordeman
Taken at the St. Patrick's Day Parade in 2016.
Landon Nordeman
Easter Sunday on 5th Avenue in 2015.

Over the course of his career, Nordeman – a regular contributor to the New York Times, Time and Vanity Fair – has shot A-list celebrities at the Met Gala, fashion insiders at New York Fashion Week, and NBA draft hopefuls at the Barclays Center. But he insists that inspiration can be found in even the city’s most hectic and accessible areas too – tourists be damned.

“When you’re in midtown you just see all of New York walk by, so I think that’s the best spot to people-watch,” he said.

“If I’m in Midtown, if I’m taking pictures, then I will stay and find a corner that has light or something, some sort of element that just I’m drawn to, and then I just want to stay there and kind of watch this parade come through.”

Watch the video above to find out more about Nordeman’s love of New York.