
“Wedding Days” brings together two decades of candid moments captured across the UK—fleeting, unguarded, and often unnoticed instances that sit between the expected rituals of the day.


“When you realize you want to spend the rest of your life with somebody, you want the rest of your life to start as soon as possible.”
When Harry Met Sally

Rather than focusing on staged portraits or formalities, this project explores the quieter, more revealing aspects of weddings: a glance exchanged, a nervous gesture, or a burst of laughter that falls just out of sequence. These are the moments where the day feels most human—where emotion slips through, unfiltered.
Working in a documentary style, I’ve approached weddings as lived experiences rather than orchestrated events. Each photograph reflects an attentiveness to timing, space, and connection—an attempt to preserve not just how the day looked, but how it felt to be there.
Over the course of 20 years, what emerges is less a collection of individual celebrations and more a broader portrait of people, relationships, and the subtle rituals that bind them together.
