Some couples arrive at a session sure they're "bad in front of the camera." Nancy and Nolan told me as much before we'd even met at the trailhead — and by the time the light went gold over Baker Beach, none of that worry was anywhere to be found.
We started up along the Batteries to Bluffs Trail while the afternoon was still bright, letting the walk do the work. No big poses, no stiff hands — just the two of them moving through the coastal scrub with the Golden Gate Bridge appearing and disappearing behind the cypress. The best frames came in the in-between moments: a laugh at something only they heard, a hand reaching back to help over a rock.
By the time we dropped down onto the sand, the sun had slipped into that last warm hour where everything turns honey-colored. This is the light I plan these sessions around — it's flattering, it's forgiving, and it gives the whole set a cinematic warmth that no editing can fake.
"We came in nervous and left feeling like ourselves. The photos look exactly like how that evening felt."
That's always the goal — real connection over posed perfection. My job isn't to direct two people into looking like a couple; it's to make enough space, and enough quiet, that they forget I'm there and simply are one. Baker Beach made that easy, but honestly, Nancy and Nolan did most of the work themselves.
If you're a couple who doesn't feel naturally comfortable in front of a camera, this is exactly the kind of session I love most. We'll keep it slow, we'll keep it moving, and we'll let the evening light carry the rest.