An Editorial Wedding at The Chicago Cultural Center

Editorial photography at a wedding isn't about making things look magazine-ready. It's about bringing the same level of attention and intentionality to the small details that you'd bring to the large ones. The fold of a veil. The way two hands look when they haven't quite let go. The expression right after the kiss, when relief and joy and disbelief all live in the same face at once.
"We wanted the photos to feel like stills from a film we actually wanted to watch."
The Vision
Jordan and Camille came to us with a mood board. It was austere, beautiful, and specific — muted tones, strong architectural lines, a preference for shadow over fill flash. They knew exactly what they wanted the images to feel like. Our job was to deliver that feeling while still capturing the real moments underneath it.
The Cultural Center was the obvious choice for that brief. Its bones are art. The Tiffany glass, the marble, the geometry of every doorway — it's a photographer's location because the architecture does the heavy lifting and lets the people be the subject.
The Details
Camille's dress had been her mother's, altered and updated. Jordan wore a suit in a shade of green that shouldn't have worked against the marble and somehow did perfectly. The florals were minimal by design — a single stem at each table, a small ceremony arch that suggested rather than declared.
Editorial weddings live in the restraint. The less competing for attention, the more space there is for the actual moment.
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