Hélène Lebon is a Franco-Canadian filmmaker and storyteller based in Prince Edward Island. She is the founder of Productions LTDU Inc., a company dedicated to documentaries and poetic works for digital platforms, television, cinema, and festivals. Her practice spans film, poetry, and installation, weaving intimate stories with universal resonance. Before turning to filmmaking, she studied journalism in Montreal, completed a master’s in political and institutional communication in Madrid, and another in teaching French as a second language in Paris. She worked internationally in education, communication, and research before immigrating to Canada, where she became a citizen. She has been anchored in life in Prince Edward Island for five years now, drawing inspiration from its landscapes and communities. Her award-winning short The little blue blouse (2023) explored sustainable fashion through indigo dye traditions between Kyoto and Montreal, screening at festivals from San Francisco to Paris, Chicago, and Japan. The spin disturber (2024), a reflection on vinyl culture in Charlottetown, was screened at the Atlantic International Film Festival. That same year, she directed Femmes réparées, corps sur-mesure, developed through the Whistler Film Festival and Film PEI Accelerator Lab, a poetic essay on resilience and women’s responses to breast cancer. In 2025, Hot Docs produced her short La femme Équi-LIBRE in Citizen Minutes Season 3, spotlighting equine therapy as an alternative mental health practice in rural PEI. She is currently directing Le frisson de la fripe, a 48-minute documentary for UnisTV that follows youth experimenting with second-hand fashion and sustainable consumption, while developing Le bleu du monde, a feature exploring indigo as a mystical and ecological symbol across cultures. An alumna of the AIFF Filmmakers Lab, Whistler & Film PEI Accelerator Lab, and Hot Docs’ Citizen Minutes, she also serves on the boards of the Fédération culturelle de l’Île-du-Prince-Édouard and Women in Film and Television Atlantic (WIFT-AT). Her work addresses identity, ecology, and memory while building bridges between people, cultures, and territories.