March 27, 2026
Your Location...your love story

The Right Place Changes Everything — How Location Tells Your Love Story
There's a moment I think about often.
Bryan and Dara didn't want a traditional wedding session. They wanted
their story — and their story happened to live on the water. The wedding day started somewhere wonderful, the port in Weehawken. The old train station with the kind of vintage character you can't manufacture. Then the port... where the Manhattan skyline spread out behind them like something from a dream. We moved to their own boat, the two of them and the Hudson, completely in their element. By the time we reached the
Chart House
for their ceremony and reception, the day had built into something that felt inevitable — like every frame was exactly where it was supposed to be.
That's what the right location does. It doesn't just give you a pretty backdrop. It gives you back to yourselves.
Place Is the Third Person in Every Photo
When couples ask me where they should have their photos taken, my first question is always: where do you actually live your life together? Not where looks good on Instagram. Not the spot everyone else uses. Where are you most yourselves?
For some couples, that's a favorite neighborhood in Jersey City or Hoboken — the corner coffee shop, the block where you used to take long walks, the rooftop where you watched storms roll in. For others, it's somewhere that holds meaning: the town where one of you grew up, the park where you got engaged, a stretch of coastline that's been yours since your first summer together.
Location shapes everything — the light, the mood, the way two people hold each other. Urban settings bring out energy and intimacy in equal measure. Open fields and rolling landscapes slow everything down and make space for quiet, tender moments. Water — a river, the shore, a lake in the Catskills — adds something almost cinematic. There's a reason so many of the photos I'm most proud of happened near water.
New Jersey Has More to Offer Than You Think
We're lucky to work in a state that doesn't get nearly enough credit. The Jersey Shore in the off-season is hauntingly beautiful — empty boardwalks, golden light, the smell of salt air. The Palisades offer dramatic cliffs and sweeping river views. Cape May feels like stepping into another century. Grounds for Sculpture in Hamilton is unlike anywhere else — art and nature layered together in a way that makes every corner a discovery.
And we're close to so much more. An hour north puts you in the Hudson Valley, with its farms, forests, and that particular fall light that photographers travel from everywhere to find. Cross into Bucks County, Pennsylvania, and you're in cobblestone streets and covered bridges. Head up to the Connecticut shoreline or the Catskills and you have entire landscapes that feel untouched.
The Best Location Is the One That Feels Like You
I've photographed couples in ballrooms and on mountaintops, in city alleys and open meadows. What makes a photo unforgettable isn't the place itself — it's the resonance between the place and the people in it. Bryan and Dara's photos work because the water wasn't just scenery. It was their life. The boat wasn't a prop. It was theirs.
When we work together, one of the first things we do is talk about the places that matter to you — the ones that carry memory, meaning, or simply make you feel at home. Then we find the light, find the moment, and let the location do what it does best.
Tell me your story. We'll find the perfect place to tell it.






