[7] Her work was also used in campaigns for Adidas, Fiat, Hermès, Levi Strauss & Co., Nike and Subaru, and published by The New York Times and Le Monde.
[4][6][8] Bee decided to pursue photography as a full-time career after unsuccessfully applying to study at Cooper Union in New York City.
[4] Kurt Soller of New York described her work as "dreamy, seventies-inspired photographs of maybe-wasted, increasingly famous young people who just want to have fun, injected with ombré washes of color (often pink)",[4] while Kathy Sweeney of The Guardian observed that "Bee finds a dreamlike, innocent colour in her friends' gently dissolute experimentation.
[4] In 2011 she cited Ryan McGinley, Annie Leibovitz and Nan Goldin as influences,[10] and attributed her inspiration to her younger brother, mother and father's musical and artistic talents.
The film depicts Bee's photographic process, focusing in part on a project completed in honour of her sister, who died before she was born.