Real Wedding Advice: Book a Wedding Photographer who honors your guests
Jessica Love captures the small, unscripted moments that make your wedding feel real—laughing grandparents, kids stealing cake, friends mid-toast—using a hybrid of film and digital to preserve the warmth and texture of each scene. Shooting throughout Columbus, Ohio, Jessica blends unobtrusive direction with a watchful eye, creating natural poses and candid frames that reflect how your guests truly felt that day. The result: honest, emotive images you’ll keep coming back to—timeless prints and vibrant digital files that tell the story of your celebration from the people who mattered most.
Real Wedding: Ohio Statehouse Portraits and Revery ceremony / reception
Real wedding: LeVeque Tower portraits, Ohio Statehouse, and rooftop reception Jessica Love Photography — Columbus, Ohio
Late‑afternoon light wrapped around the LeVeque Tower the day these two said “I do.” We followed the glow from the tower’s stonework into the warm, intimate moments at the Ohio Statehouse, then up to a skyline rooftop where family and friends celebrated under the last light of day. Below are the portraits and a quick guide to how we approached them — composition, direction, and technical notes — so couples and fellow photographers can see how a hybrid film + digital workflow captured this wedding’s honest, textured feeling.
LeVeque Tower portraits Timing
Aim for late afternoon into golden hour. The warm light flatters faces and brings out the rich tones and texture of the tower’s limestone and terra‑cotta details.
Poses & direction
Walking shot: have the couple walk along the sidewalk with a slow, relaxed shuffle toward the camera. Encourage natural conversation and small, sideways glances — movement makes expressions feel candid and alive.
Ledge lean: one partner slightly behind the other with hands linked on a building ledge. This creates intimacy while letting the tower’s texture act as a tactile background.
Architectural frame: position the couple beneath an arch or between columns so the tower’s vertical lines draw the viewer’s eye to them. Use a shallow depth of field to separate the couple from the stonework while keeping the architectural context.
Close‑up portrait: forehead‑to‑forehead or cheek‑to‑cheek to capture quiet emotion. Focus on the eyes; keep expressions soft and genuine rather than overly posed.
Dramatic wide: step back to include more of the tower. Use a slightly lower angle to emphasize height and scale, showing the couple as part of the city’s story.
Framing & mood notes
Mix tight, emotional frames with wide images that show scale. The LeVeQue’s details are beautiful up close, but giving the tower room in the frame tells the location’s story.
Encourage pauses in motion. Even brief stillness (a hand squeeze, a slow breath) translates to powerful portraits.
Ohio Statehouse portraits Context & mood
The Statehouse brings formal lines and stately steps — great for slightly more composed portraits while keeping the couple’s energy natural.
Use the building’s steps and balustrades for layered compositions: sit them on different steps, have one seated with the other perched slightly above for dynamic lines.
Poses & direction
Seated conversation: have them sit close, knees angled toward each other, talk softly. Capture the small reactions — laughter, a soft smile, the way they look at each other.
Movement across steps: walk them up or down the steps slowly, capturing the rhythm of the moment. Natural footwork keeps poses from feeling stiff.
Symmetry vs. asymmetry: the Statehouse’s architecture lends itself to symmetrical shots. Break symmetry with one partner turned slightly, or by using foreground elements for depth.
Lighting & color
In late afternoon, the Statehouse stone warms beautifully. Balance exposure so faces stay lit without blowing highlights on light façades.
Consider using reflectors or subtle fill to lift shadows under chins and eyes while keeping a natural look.
Rooftop reception portraits Vibe & composition
The rooftop gives you skyline context and a relaxed reception atmosphere. Use long lens work for compressed cityscapes behind the couple and wider frames for the party energy.
Golden hour into blue hour transitions are great: warm portraits into moody, twilight dancing shots.
Poses & direction
Real Wedding featuring Oak Grove
A real wedding featuring a winter day at Oak Grove Jorgensen Farms shot by Jessica Love Photography
Cory & Dani on B+W film
Landerhaven in Cleveland, Ohio summer wedding on a Sunday, film photographer Jessica Love shows images shot on Black and White film
Corazon Goodness
a selection of favorite images from The Club at Corazon in Dublin, Ohio shot by Jessica Love Photography. The wedding venue inspires looks from the Italian style with stucco walls and gorgeous views
best of 2025 part two
a part two of all the best of 2025 images by Jessica love photography
2025 recapped!
Jessica Love Photography shot hybrid film + digital photography in and around Columbus, Ohio in 2025. This is a recap of all the weddings, engagement, commercial and family photography captured until March!
while it’s fresh: Best Practices (as I see them as your photographer)
colorful wedding photography by Jessica love Photography
2025 booking season discount!
booking discount for weddings in 2026 - highly discounted wedding photography near me in Columbus ohio
Hello Color!
A trend of Colorful wedding decor was increasingly seen this year in Columbus, Ohio. Bright florals with pops of bright signage and decor was a cheerful way to celebrate wedding season. This wedding, featured at North 4th Corridor, which includes Revery and Brick and Mortar, had both of those colorful details.
Sarah & Jonathan
a summer wedding at The Timbrook guest house in Columbus Ohio. Gorgeous summer pastel florals make the backdrop perfect.

