
Quiet Confidence
A Port Angeles boudoir photographer's perspective on what makes these sessions work — the moment the nerves drop, what a safe creative space actually feels like, and why this work matters.
Every boudoir session has a moment about forty minutes in — sometimes earlier, rarely later — when something changes.
The person I'm photographing, who arrived careful and contained and maybe a little braced for judgment, stops performing for the camera and starts just being in the room. It usually happens quietly: a laugh that isn't manufactured, an exhale, a moment where they forget I'm there and I catch something real.
That's the photograph I came for. The ones before it are good, often technically better. But the ones that happen after that shift are the ones that last.

Why This Work Matters to Me
I started photographing boudoir sessions because clients asked, and I continued because the work surprised me.
What I didn't anticipate was how much the sessions are about something other than the photographs. The images are the product, but they're not really the point. The point, most of the time, is the experience of spending two hours being seen and witnessed in a way that feels safe — and coming out the other side with evidence that you look the way you hoped you might.

I live and work in Port Angeles, on the Olympic Peninsula in Washington. It's a small community, and I'm aware that deciding to book this kind of session — and deciding who to trust with it — is not a small thing. I don't take that lightly.

Creating a Safe Space
A few things I've built into how I do this work:
All boudoir sessions take place in a private, controlled setting. No other crew, no assistants in the room unless requested.
I follow your lead on comfort level throughout the shoot. Nothing is required. If something doesn't feel right, we move on. There's no script.
Images are handled with strict confidentiality. If you want photos shared publicly — on my portfolio, social media, or anywhere else — I'll ask you explicitly. No is always a complete answer.
The session is yours. Some people come knowing exactly what they want; some arrive with only a vague sense of wanting something. Both are fine. We figure it out together.



What to Expect
Sessions typically run two to three hours, including time to settle in and get comfortable with the space. You can bring wardrobe options — I'd suggest two or three — or we can talk through what you have before the session.

I shoot on the Olympic Peninsula and the surrounding area. I'm also available to travel for sessions in other locations throughout Washington state.
If you have questions about what a boudoir session with me looks like, or you want to talk through anything before booking, the contact page is the place to start. No pressure, no sales pitch. Just a conversation.


Happy International Women's Day.
Have a project in mind?
Based in Port Angeles, Washington · Available throughout the Olympic Peninsula