Styled Shoot | Courthouse, Fries, and Records

Alex and Logan’s session was built around a very simple idea: your wedding day doesn’t have to follow a script to be meaningful. It just has to feel like you.

We started at the Tarrant County Courthouse to represent the many couples who choose to get married through a Justice of the Peace. No aisle, no guests, no production. Just two people showing up in love and ready to make it official.

From there, we did what I wish more couples felt empowered to do: we treated the rest of the day like real life. We wandered around downtown, took photos in the in-between moments, grabbed fries and a shake at In-N-Out Burger, and ended the evening flipping through records at a local shop.

No timeline. No pressure. No performance.

Logan wore a vintage dress from Forever Amber Vintage and carried a faux bouquet made by The Floral Eclectic. Both felt intentional without feeling like “wedding” in the traditional sense, which was exactly the point.

This shoot exists to show future couples what I mean when I say I photograph non-traditional wedding days. Not perfection. Not performance. Just connection.

Whether you’re eloping at a courthouse, having dinner with a few friends, or spending your wedding day doing the same things you’d do on a really good Saturday, it all deserves to be documented.

Your wedding can be quiet, small, low budget, low key, unplanned, or totally off the radar and still be full of meaning.

Alex and Logan didn’t need a venue, a planner, or a guest list to make this day feel important. They just needed each other, a courthouse, fries and a shake, and a record store.

And honestly, that’s kind of my dream wedding day to photograph.

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Dallas Courthouse Wedding | Lauren + Tunde