Wedding Photography & Video in Baltimore
Baltimore has more going on than most cities its size. The Inner Harbor gives you water and skyline in the same frame. Fells Point has 18th-century brick streetscapes and cobblestones that catch light at a low angle and look genuinely old, because they are. Mount Vernon is formal: wide boulevards, the Washington Monument at the center, stone buildings that photograph like a European capital. And the neighborhoods (Canton, Federal Hill, Hampden) each have their own character.
Shooting in Baltimore means knowing where the light goes. By 4 p.m. in December, outdoor portraits are done. We work around that. Summer evenings on the Inner Harbor are excellent, with water reflecting the sky, long golden hours. Receptions at converted industrial spaces in Brewers Hill or Clipper Mill have high ceilings and textured walls that work well even under artificial light.
Spend some time in the portfolio. If you're planning a Baltimore wedding, let's figure out the timeline together.
Popular wedding venues in the area
The Grand Baltimore — Charles Street ballroom venue in a restored 1910s neoclassical building, with tall ceilings, ornate detail, and a central staircase that makes a formal portrait backdrop nothing else in the city matches.
Cylburn Arboretum — North Baltimore city park with a Victorian mansion and 200 acres of gardens. The ceremony meadow has open-sky light and no urban backdrop, which is unusual for an in-city venue.
Clipper Mill — Woodberry converted industrial campus with stone walls, iron mill buildings, and a courtyard that gets late-afternoon light from the south; one of Baltimore's most distinctive non-hotel reception spaces.
The Waterfront Hotel — Fells Point waterfront bar and venue with a rooftop deck over the Inner Harbor. Small capacity, intimate feel, and harbor-view portraits that work even in overcast conditions.
Historic Inns of Annapolis — Three connected 18th-century buildings in downtown Annapolis. Technically just outside Baltimore, but within easy reach and a completely different architectural context than any city venue.
Mount Washington Tavern — North Baltimore neighborhood restaurant and event space with brick interior and garden patio; works well for smaller ceremonies and receptions.
Peabody Library — The George Peabody Library on Mount Vernon Place. One of the most photographed interior spaces in Maryland, a 19th-century atrium with five tiers of cast-iron balconies and natural overhead light that makes flash unnecessary.
The Sagamore Pendry Baltimore — Thames Street hotel in Fells Point with a waterfront ballroom and courtyard. Harbor access and the historic neighborhood surroundings give strong portrait options within walking distance.
Areas we cover include: Inner Harbor, Fells Point, Canton, Federal Hill, Mount Vernon, Brewers Hill.