Over the past couple of years, I’ve started dipping my toes into 35mm film. I picked up my first film camera without really knowing what to expect, wanting to explore it on my own before ever considering bringing it into my professional work. It was important to me to make sure I truly loved it, and that it aligned with how I already approach photographing a wedding day.
Spoiler alert: I was hooked almost immediately.
Since then, film has become something I genuinely love incorporating into how I photograph. I recently started offering it as an add-on for weddings because I truly believe it adds something meaningful to a wedding day.
If you’re on the fence about adding 35mm film to your wedding day, here are a few of the reasons I’ve been so drawn to it, and why I’ve fallen in love with it.

Take it from a chronic “overshooter”, with digital, it’s easy to take hundreds of photos without thinking twice. But film doesn’t work like that. There’s no screen to check, no instant feedback, no reassurance that you “got the shot” before moving on. It requires you to really see the moment, and make a split-second, intentional decision to press the shutter.
Because of that, it’s really forced me to slow down and pay closer attention. I’ve found myself being more intentional about what I’m capturing and why.
Film reminds me of old family photos—the kind tucked into albums (we still have ours), where flipping through them brings you right back to that exact moment. Not something you scroll past on your phone, but something you actually sit with. The kind you find years later and instantly feel something.
There’s a depth to it that’s hard to recreate digitally. It’s a little imperfect, a little softer, and that’s exactly why it works.

After shooting more and more film personally, it started to feel like a natural extension of how I already approach weddings. I’ve always been drawn to the in-between moments—the ones that aren’t posed or planned. Film fits into that seamlessly. It allows me to capture those moments in a way that feels even more organic and unforced.
So over time, I began bringing it along to weddings and sessions to try and incorporate it in a small, intentional way. Not to replace digital photos, but to complement them.

If you choose to include film coverage, I’ll photograph select parts of your day on 35mm film alongside your digital images.
It’s not about putting everything on film. It’s just about being intentional with it, and choosing the moments that actually feel right. Usually the quieter, in-between ones. The ones that don’t need to be perfect to matter.
Those images are then developed and scanned, and delivered alongside your full gallery.

Film isn’t for everyone—and that’s okay.
But if you’re drawn to:
…it might be something you’ll really love having as part of your day.

Film has become something I genuinely love—not just for how it looks, but for how it makes me photograph. If you’re drawn to the feeling of film and are considering adding it to your wedding day, I’d love to talk through whether it’s a good fit for you.
