There is something unmistakable about the stretch of the Guadalupe River at Milltown Historic District. It has a quiet confidence to it. The water moves steadily past, the trees cast just enough shade, and everything feels ready without needing to announce itself. When Megan and Tyler arrived that day, they took a moment to look around, not rushed, not distracted, just taking in the place where their wedding would unfold. It was clear they had chosen somewhere that fit them naturally, somewhere they could be fully present from the very beginning.
Read Moret is easy to think about the ceremony, the dress, the first dance. Those are the pillars. But over the years, after standing beside more than two hundred couples and watching their weddings unfold in real time, we have noticed something quieter and just as powerful. It is the unexpected moments that guests talk about long after the music fades.
Read MoreThere is something we have noticed after photographing weddings across San Antonio for years. The couples who look the most relaxed in their photographs are almost never the ones who planned their day around a checklist of images. They are the ones who planned their day around people.
Read MoreWe have photographed Catholic weddings all across San Antonio and the surrounding communities for years. Grand cathedrals downtown. Intimate parish churches tucked into neighborhoods. Historic sanctuaries where generations have said yes before God and family. Each one carries its own personality. And every now and then, we walk into a church and quietly think, we would love to photograph a wedding here.
That was our reaction to St. James.
Read MoreThere is a moment we have watched unfold hundreds of times now, and somehow it never gets old. Wedding guests settle into their seats. Conversations soften. Then the first notes float through the air, not from a speaker tucked behind a chair, but from a real person standing just a few feet away, singing with intention. Every time that happens, we feel it in our chests. Live music changes the energy of a ceremony in a way nothing else quite can.
Read MoreWhen couples begin searching for wedding venues near San Antonio, they often focus on the city itself. Yet just east of San Antonio sits one of Texas’ most historic and quietly beautiful towns—Seguin. Founded in 1838 and known for its rich German heritage, limestone architecture, pecan groves along the Guadalupe River, and one of the top barbecue spots in Texas - The Burnt Bean, Seguin offers something increasingly rare in modern wedding planning: authenticity.
Read MoreWe know how overwhelming planning a wedding can be. It happens so often when we are meeting a newly engaged couple for the first time; they’re excited, a little overwhelmed, and already apologizing for the number of questions they have about pricing. We laugh and tell them what we tell every couple. If you are not asking questions, you are probably doing it wrong.
Read MoreWe usually meet couples at our in-home studio, sometimes closer to where they live, sometimes over a video call when life is busy. Almost every time, the conversation starts the same way. They tell us how excited they are, how fast everything feels, and then, usually with a little laugh, they say they are not sure what they are supposed to do in front of the camera. That moment is where documentary style wedding photography really begins, even if they do not know the term yet.
Read MoreSome weddings start with champagne flutes clinking and music drifting through a venue. Furqan and Kiara’s wedding started with something quieter and, in its own way, far more grounding. Morning light filtered through the trees at Zilker Botanical Garden, the air still cool, the paths mostly empty except for a handful of people who mattered most. Eleven, to be exact. Just Furqan and Kiara, their parents, and their siblings. Immediate family only. No extras. No distractions.
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