Vogue wrote an article on drapery and this wedding couldn’t have been a better example. The first time I saw this install from @aeandco it took my breath away. Wise words from @shelbywax@bethhelmstetter@aeandco@mindyweiss if you are considering drapery for your upcoming wedding.
@annigraham on transitions, motherhood, creative identity, and what it takes to keep growing as an artist. A deeply honest conversation and must listen 👇
Comment ‘AG’ and we’ll personally send you the link to listen: Episode 046 - The Inner Life of Anni Graham 🎧
A spring wedding at the Boathouse.
Things I remember and feel looking at these photos - the warm spring air, the trees in full bloom, the rain, Andrew’s smile all day long, walking around the city before the wedding, the flowers, the stories shared during dinner at sunset, the friends and family who all came together.
The memories live in the emotions.
Design & planning @bylara.design.planning
Florist @blxxm__
Stationary @y.h_designs_
Live music @dleeventgroup
Video @johnp.films
Cake @yip.studio_
Makeup & hair @by.jina_official
Venue & catering @purslaneattheboathouse
If there’s one thing a century of photography has proven, it’s this: emotion is what lasts. Trends fade, techniques evolve, but feeling holds. So if you’re chasing timeless, this is it. What’s real. How it feels. What actually matters.
@detailskristi@gothamhallny@taylorrooks
Featured on @gq
Film photography has become a very trending topic in the last few years and I wanted to share my take on it to help couples understand the draw it has for me.
Shooting film is the most sure way that I can edit my images consistently. Film will be the same on each different day, from each different photographer, now and in 50 years. I use my film scans to edit digital photos from multiple different cameras, styles, and moments so that everything together creates a consistent, true to life color story.
Most good film scans can hardly be recognized as film. It’s more about the color, the longevity, the consistency it gives a gallery.
Film also changes the way I shoot. It demands presence, you can’t overshoot film. It’s slow, thoughtful. It forces you to choose your moments and follow your instincts.
It also pushes you to be better. There’s no back of camera review. No “I’ll photoshop it later”. You have to deeply understand light and composition.
Film creates something different. Not just a trendy take on wedding photos. It’s something deeper.
@aeandco@piochoranch