There are weddings I look back on and think about what I'd do differently now — not because something went wrong, but because experience changes how you see things.


At the time, I approached the day the best way I knew how. I was paying attention, working hard, and doing what I thought mattered most. The photographs from that day still hold meaning, but looking at them now, I can see things I would approach differently.


Over time, you start to notice more — the way people interact, how moments build, where to stand before something beautiful happens instead of reacting to it after the fact. You begin to understand not just what's happening, but what's about to happen.


It's a shift that doesn't come all at once, but gradually, through experience.


Looking back at past wedding collections, I see moments that could have been approached with more intention. Not missed moments, but moments that could have been seen more clearly, framed more thoughtfully, or given a little more space.


But that's also part of the process. Every wedding teaches you something, and those lessons carry forward into the next one.


I don't look at these photographs with regret. I look at them as a reminder of how much this work continues to shape my perspective — and how every wedding becomes part of that growth.