Asheville Wedding Pricing

Weddings with a built-in mountain experience — time with your people and time that’s just yours.

A newlywed couple walking hand in hand outdoors, smiling and laughing, with guests in the background at a wedding ceremony on a grassy hill with trees and a cloudy sky.

Not Just a Wedding Day

Most wedding days end up feeling like a bit of a balancing act—be present with your people, but also step away for photos. Stay in the moment, but keep things moving. It’s a lot to juggle.

So instead of trying to fit everything into one day, I’ve found that separating things can make it a lot easier (and less stressful) to get enough time together in the mountains, and plenty of time to be fully present with your family and friends. Both parts of the experience get the attention they deserve and neither portion feels like an afterthought or pinched for time.

Two Days, One Wedding

Rather than squeezing everything into one timeline, we split it across two days.

One day is set aside for just the two of you—usually the day before. We head into the mountains, slow things down, and give you space to take it all in. If you want to share private vows, this is the perfect time. No guests, no pressure, no tight schedule.

Then on your wedding day, you get to be fully present with your people. Ceremony, dinner, time with family and friends—without needing to step away for long stretches of photos. You’re actually there for it.

You’re not choosing between experiences—you’re giving each one its own space.

Why This Approach Works

On a single wedding day, something usually gets compromised—either your time together feels rushed, or your time with your people gets interrupted.

And in a place like the mountains, there are practical limitations too. Some of the best locations simply aren’t accessible for larger groups or for guests with mobility considerations, which can make those more remote overlooks and waterfalls - which are often the most impressive and least busy, harder or impossible to include.

Splitting it into two days changes that. You get real, uninterrupted time together in the mountains without needing to choose a location based on group logistics or accessibility. You can go somewhere that actually feels right for you and experience it at a relaxed pace—without stress or second-guessing.

Then on your wedding day, you’re free to stay present, relaxed, and fully engaged with everyone who came to celebrate you. You’ve already had that grounding time together, so being present with your people comes more naturally.

It’s a better experience—and it shows in the photos.

Wedding + Mountain Experience

Day 1 - Just You Two

Day 2 - With your People

A Better Way to Experience It

A lot of couples don’t realize how quickly a wedding day moves until they’re in it. This approach gives you something different—time set aside just for the two of you in the mountains, and a separate day to be fully present with your people. Nothing rushed, nothing competing. Just space to actually experience both parts of it fully.

Mountain Experience (Day One)

  • 3–4 hours of coverage

  • Access to carefully selected mountain locations

  • Relaxed, flexible pace

  • Option for private vows or just time together

Wedding Day (Day Two)

  • 6–8 hours of coverage

  • Ceremony, portraits, details, real candid moments and time with family + friends

  • Timeline guidance to keep things flowing naturally

  • Minimal interruptions so you can stay present

Also included:

  • Hidden gem location guidance + experience-forward timeline planning

  • Friendly, documentary-style guidance (mostly candid, with direction when helpful)

  • Comprehensive storytelling coverage (portraits + real moments throughout)

  • Hybrid digital + film coverage

  • 48-hour preview gallery

  • Full online gallery with downloads + print access

  • Highlight slideshow

  • Optional aerial imagery

  • Trusted local vendor recommendations

  • Unlimited planning support + check-ins

A Quick Note

I don’t typically book single-day, venue-only weddings. Not because there’s anything wrong with them—it’s just not how I do my best work.

The couples who get the most out of this approach are the ones who want to separate the experience: time together in the mountains, and time fully present with their people.

If that balance matters to you, you’ll feel right at home here.

Let’s Get Started!

Fill out this form and I’ll reach to set up a no pressure call to meet each other, go over your ideas, answer questions.