Moments Between Moments
The Moments Between Moments
Everyone at your wedding has a camera. What they don't have is 25 years of knowing where to look.
The moments that end up mattering most are rarely the ones anyone planned. They happen in the space between the toasts and the first dance, in the corner of the room nobody is watching, in the split second before someone realizes they're being photographed. A bride perfectly framed in an open doorway. Children chasing giant bubbles while the adults forget to act dignified. Someone's wedding gown going somewhere no wedding gown has gone before.
In an age when artificial intelligence can generate a flawless, perfectly lit, utterly fictional wedding in seconds, I'd argue that the imperfect and the authentic have never mattered more. The tilted champagne glass. The mascara that didn't quite survive the vows. The flower girl who decided the reception was a better time for a nap. These are the images that will mean something in twenty years — not because they're perfect, but because they're true.
I've spent a career developing the instinct to find these moments — to be in the right place, pointed in the right direction, before anyone else in the room knows something is about to happen. This is that work.