George worked every night for six months to resurrect his dad’s old Trans Am, and on the evening he married Annika it carried them down a gravel farm road like devotion made visible, dust rising behind them like in a classic action movie with a whimsical love story. At Valley View Farm, traditions from Denmark, Lebanon, and the United States folded into one another as horses grazed in golden hour…
Read MoreThe Long Way Through the Bogs of Wareham
Ever wonder what a cranberry bog looks like in the summer? Megan & Patrick are lucky enough to live a few blocks from one in Wareham, so we followed them through a wooded trail that opened up to this unique landscape and took in the evening summer sun. Sometimes we like to leave our posing ideas open-ended…
Read MoreFoggy Trails & Puppy Tails in Central MA
When Michael and Jane said they were bringing their dog to this engagement session I did not expect a tiny cloud in a bowtie, but here he is! The sweetness in this engagement session was a perfect blend with the moody mist of the Quabbin…
Read MoreValley View Farm at Sunset (Engagement Session)
We live 20 minutes from Valley View Farm and we’ve spent so much time there at this point, it feels like home. Mac & Tea will be married there next year and wanted to bring their dog Pipi to the farm for some relaxed sunset engagement photos, and nature did not disappoint. We are so looking forward to their big party in 2026!
Vintage Daydream In-Home Boudoir Session
This in-home boudoir session felt like stepping into a quiet movie scene.. soft light, vintage charm, and a relaxed vibe. We moved from reading nooks to backyard lounges, letting the vibe shift from sultry to Sunday-afternoon lounging realness. The goal was to show her feeling 100% at home — in her space and in her skin.
A Maternity Session in Two Worlds
Amanda is a teacher, a reiki master, a photographer and a mother. We made these portraits in deep winter (after I tripled checked with her about braving the cold)- just as the days are getting a tad longer and roots were stirring beneath the surface, still going undetected but on the cusp of breaking through for spring. Across the world, it was orange season. In ancient Japan, they believed oranges came from the “Eternal Land” — a place beyond time, where past, present, and future blur into one sweet, golden now. I brought some Sumo Citrus mandarins to our session because they reminded me of a pregnant belly: radiant, otherworldly, full of life.
This session was a meditation on duality — the soft, supple glow of expectancy and the fierce, grounded strength of motherhood. We honored both. Candlelight, bare skin, and tender connection gave way to wool cloaks, winter stillness, and the pointed edge of sais; ancient tools of defense and devotion. Amanda stood in every version of herself, timeless and whole, and the camera simply followed her lead.