Brit Jaye, a Dayton, Cincinnati, and Nashville wedding photographer who combines candid storytelling with editorial-style wedding images.

Meet your wedding photographer

I’ve photographed weddings exclusively for the past twelve years. Before that, I spent ten years working in both a portrait studio and a professional print lab. On a wedding day, where nothing can be repeated, that experience matters.

Most couples haven’t had their photos professionally taken very often, if ever, and I never expect anyone to show up knowing exactly what to do. My job is to guide you in a way that feels easy and natural, so you can stay present and still end up with images that feel like you.

I photograph weddings with feeling.

That means I’m paying attention to emotion, connection, atmosphere, and all the little shifts in energy that make a day feel the way it did while you were living it. Of course I care about beautiful portraits, but I’m just as invested in the candid moments, the guest interactions, the quiet in-between parts, and the pieces of the day you may not have fully seen while they were happening.

I want your gallery to feel layered. Real moments. Real people. The parts you remember clearly, and the parts you didn’t realize mattered until later.

I also leave room for a little artistry. Sometimes that shows up in movement, light, or an image that feels a little more interpretive. Not because I want your wedding to feel over-styled, but because art has a way of holding emotion differently. When those images are woven in naturally, they add depth to a gallery and make it feel even more like memory.

A big part of my work starts before the wedding day. I help my couples think through the timeline so there is room to breathe, room to be present, and room for the day to unfold without everything feeling rushed. When the day feels calm, the photographs reflect that.

For me, what makes wedding photography timeless isn’t stiffness or tradition. It’s true-to-life color, real connection, and images that still make you feel something years later.

If that sounds like what you’re looking for, I’d love to hear what you’re planning.