Let Go of Perfect
Here’s the thing—your wedding isn’t a styled shoot. It’s not about Pinterest-perfect poses or golden-hour light that hits just so (though hey, if we get that, I’m not mad about it). It’s about how it feels.
The way your stomach flips right before the ceremony. That look you give each other when no one else is watching. The tear your dad tries to hide. The drunk cousin doing the worm in the background of your first dance. That’s the good shit. And that’s what I’m here to capture.
I’m not here to direct your day or curate some dreamy-ass aesthetic that looks great but doesn’t mean a damn thing to you five years from now. I’m here for the real, for the weird, for the soft and loud and quiet and wild. The stuff that actually happened. Because when you let go of the pressure to make everything look perfect—you make room for something better:
Real joy. Real connection. Real memories.
And those are the photos you’ll come back to again and again.
 




I want to give your emotions more credit.
I think you already know exactly what matters most on your wedding day—whether it’s the way your partner looks at you during the vows, or the fact that your grandma’s hands will be holding yours during family portraits. That’s the stuff I want to photograph. Not the forced moments, not the fake laughs, not the highly curated flat lays with things you were told to bring but don’t actually care about.
You don’t need your day directed like a production. You just need space to be yourselves—and someone who’s paying attention to the things that actually matter to you.
"Just be yourself, people love that shit." -Katelyn Abrahamson





My people?
They’re the ones who plan a wedding in three months because waiting just feels silly.
They wear boots instead of heels, or a suit that feels right instead of “wedding-y.”
They want to spend time with their people, not posing for hours.
They care more about how the day feels than how it looks on a mood board.
If that sounds like you—I think we’re gonna get along just fine.