Sessions
Six formats. One studio voice.
Every session shares the same direction, the same lighting craft, and the same all-female team. The format you choose determines the pace, the wardrobe, and the final pieces.

Classic
Classic Boudoir
Editorial portraiture, polished and unhurried.

Fine Art
Fine Art Boudoir
Dramatic light, sculptural form, gallery-grade prints.

Bridal
Bridal Boudoir
A wedding gift your partner will not see coming.

Couples
Couples Boudoir
Two people, one studio, the kind of portraits you do not put on Instagram.

Maternity
Maternity Boudoir
Pregnancy on your terms, photographed like art.

Glamour
Glamour
Old Hollywood lighting. Modern direction.
Choosing a format
How clients land on the right session.
Most first-time clients are not sure which format to book and that is the right place to start. The fastest shortcut is the occasion. If the session is a wedding gift, bridal boudoir is the answer. If the date is six to eight weeks before the wedding the timeline is comfortable; we can also rush it. If the occasion is a milestone birthday, an anniversary, a body change, or simply a chapter close, classic boudoir is the default. It is the studio's foundation and the most-booked format across both metros.
Fine art boudoir is the right call when the deliverable is a single wall piece sized for a specific room rather than a varied album. The sessions run slower and the edit is more deliberate. Many fine art commissions are paired with a classic session in the same day so a client leaves with both an album and a framed piece. Couples boudoir is its own format because the direction style shifts to the dynamic between two people. We often book it for anniversaries or after an elopement.
Maternity sits in a narrow booking window. Weeks 30 to 36 of pregnancy is the sweet spot. Earlier than 30 the bump rarely photographs the way clients are imagining; later than 36 introduces logistics risk. The format is calibrated for comfort, with built-in breaks and posing that does not require long stretches on your back. Glamour is the same direction, lighting, and team as the other formats but with wardrobe shifted toward formalwear and editorial pieces. It is the option for clients who want the experience without the lingerie format, often for personal-branding portraits with editorial depth.
When clients write to us not sure which to book, we ask three questions: what is the occasion, when does the work need to be in your hands, and what room or product do you imagine the work living as. Those three answers point to the right format. We are happy to make the call together on the inquiry response.
