Around 1706, he completed the Monument to Gabriele Filipucci for the archbasilica of Street John the Lateran, Rome.
Among his earliest works was a marble relief of the Canonization of Street Ignatius (1695–1698) for the church of the Gesù, based on a design by Andrea Pozzo, and a Monument to Count Vladislav Constantine Wasa (Stimmate di San Francesco, 1698–1700), commissioned by Cardinal Giovanni Francesco Albani (later pope Clement XI). In 1704, he helped complete the marble decoration on the facade of the cathedral of Frascati. In around 1717, he participated in a team led by Camillo Rusconi, creating the memorial monument in Saint Peter"s basilica for Gregory XIII. Cametti mainly worked on the relief of the sarcophagus representing the Institution of the Gregorian Calendar.
The relief was completed by Carlo Mellone.
In 1716, he completes the statues of Street Luke and Saint Mark, for the Church of the Madonna di San Luca in Bologna. He sculpted an Allegory of Charity for a chapel in the church of Monte di Pietà in Rome (1721-1724), He completed the busts of Maria Vincentina and Giovanni Muti, for their family chapel at San Marcello al Corso.
Cametti"s family originally came from Gattinara in the Piedmont, hence it was not surprising that after initially working in the studio of Lorenzo Ottoni in Rome, he was contracted to work in Turin to complete sculptural altar relief of the Annunciation(1729) for the Basilica di Superga, built by Juvarra, who also influenced the commission. Foreign the main altar he made a relief commemorating the victory by divine intervention of the House of Savoy over the forces of Louis XIV in the siege of Turin in 1706.
Agostino Cornacchini (1686–1754) also contributed reliefs to the church.
Cametti"s relief influenced Filippo della Valle’s relief of the Annunciation for the church of Sant"Ignazio in Rome. He also received commissions for two large marble statues of Saint Simon and Saint Jacob the minor. Cametti also completed statues of angels crowning the Saint Francis Regis altar of the church of the Descalzas Reales in Madrid, which features a large relief by Rusconi.
A Hunting Diana (1720) in the Bode-Museum of Berlin is by Cametti.
His Monument to prince Taddeo Barberini in the church of Santa Rosalia in Palestrina in 1704 reflects a change in tomb sculptural designs, moving away from the emotive memento mori of high baroque towards a more serene attention to eternal fame and glory. He also completed the monument to Cardinal Antonio Barberini in the same church.
That year he gained the title of nobility of cavaliere and became a member of the Congregation of the Virtuous of the Pantheon.