Documentary & Editorial Wedding Photography
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Saturday, March 21, 2026
By Sally Carpenter
Documentary vs Editorial Wedding Photography: What’s the Difference?
As a Vermont wedding photographer, many couples ask about the difference between documentary and editorial styles.
If you’ve been looking through wedding photos and thinking, “I love this… but I also love that,” you’re not alone. Most couples are naturally drawn to both candid, emotional moments and more refined, beautifully composed images — even if they don’t yet know the terms for them.
These two approaches are known as documentary and editorial wedding photography. Understanding how they differ — and how they can work together — is one of the most helpful steps in choosing the right photographer for your day.
Documentary Wedding Photography
Documentary wedding photography — sometimes referred to as journalistic or candid — is rooted in observation rather than direction. Instead of posing or guiding moments, I allow the day to unfold naturally, capturing what is real as it happens. The focus is on genuine emotion — the quiet, the unexpected, and the in-between moments that often become the most meaningful memories over time.
This approach allows you to be fully present, without interruption, while your story is documented as it truly felt. From fleeting glances to bursts of laughter, documentary photography preserves the atmosphere of your day in a way that is honest, personal, and enduring.
To photograph moments this way, we don’t stand apart from the day — we move with it. We stay close, aware, and connected, allowing genuine interactions to unfold naturally while anticipating where emotion and light come together. This approach creates images that feel immersive and real, rather than observed from a distance.
While documentary photography allows moments to unfold naturally, there are also times during a wedding day when a more intentional, guided approach can elevate the imagery even further. This is where editorial photography comes in — offering a refined way of creating beautifully composed images while still preserving a sense of authenticity. By working with two cameras, we’re able to move seamlessly between perspectives, capturing what is real while also creating images that feel elevated and timeless, without interrupting the natural flow of the day.
Editorial Wedding Photography
An Editorial Approach to Wedding Photography
While our work is rooted in documentary storytelling, we are equally drawn to the artistry of composition, light, and form. We photograph with two cameras, allowing us to move seamlessly between perspectives—one capturing the full environment, the other isolating quieter, more refined moments.
This approach allows us to create images that feel both natural and elevated—where the emotion of the moment remains intact, yet the frame itself carries a sense of intention, softness, and depth.
The most meaningful wedding galleries are not created by choosing one approach over the other, but by allowing both to exist in balance. Throughout the day, we move fluidly between documenting what is naturally unfolding and creating space for more refined, intentional imagery.
This balance allows your photographs to feel complete — preserving the emotion, atmosphere, and spontaneity of the day, while also capturing those timeless, beautifully composed images you’ll return to again and again.
An Unobtrusive, Intentional Presence
We approach each wedding with a calm, intuitive presence — fully engaged in the moments as they unfold, yet never pulling attention away from them. With an understanding of how quickly energy can shift when too many perspectives enter the space, we work with intention and awareness, allowing your day to feel natural, fluid, and uninterrupted.
This balance ensures that what is captured remains genuine — not staged, not crowded — but truly experienced.
Choosing What Feels Right
Your wedding photography should feel like a reflection of you — natural, effortless, and deeply personal. If you find yourself drawn to both honest, unscripted moments and refined, editorial imagery, you don’t have to choose between them.
If this feels like the way you want your wedding to be remembered, I’d love to hear about what you’re planning.