“You don’t take bad photos. You just haven’t met the right photographer yet.”

I didn’t become a boudoir photographer because I thought women needed help becoming beautiful. Most of us already spend our lives carrying beauty around, even when we no longer recognize it in ourselves.

I became a photographer because I saw how easily women disappear from their own lives.

Somewhere between motherhood, responsibility, relationships, work, insecurity, and survival, we begin to live beside ourselves instead of inside ourselves. We become caretakers of everyone else’s needs while quietly negotiating our relationship with our own body in the background.

I know that feeling well.

I’m a mother of four, and in many ways, photography found me during a season where I was trying to reconnect with myself too. Not just physically, but emotionally. I wanted to feel at home in my own body again. I wanted to move through the world without constantly measuring myself against who I used to be.

What surprised me was realizing how many women were carrying that same quiet ache.

Over the years, I’ve photographed women from every stage of life. Some arrive nervous and apologetic. Some haven’t seen themselves as sensual in years. Some are celebrating survival. Some are rediscovering confidence after motherhood, heartbreak, illness, or change. Most walk into the studio believing they need to become more confident before stepping in front of the camera.

The truth is usually the opposite.

Confidence is often what finally begins to return when someone feels safe enough to be seen.

That’s the heart of Fem Boudoir.

I created this studio to feel less like a performance and more like an exhale. A place without judgment, pressure, or impossible beauty standards. I care deeply about privacy, trust, and helping women feel present in themselves instead of hyperaware of every perceived flaw.

You do not need to earn beauty before booking a session with us.

You do not need to lose weight first.
You do not need to know how to pose.
You do not need to become a different version of yourself.

My job is simply to help you see what has been there all along.

Outside the studio, you’ll usually find me chasing sunlight with my kids, planning my next trip near the ocean, or collecting inspiration from little moments most people walk past too quickly. Travel has taught me that beauty rarely lives in perfection. It lives in honesty, texture, movement, softness, and presence.

That’s how I photograph women too.