Wedding Photographers in Manhattan
Manhattan is not a calm place to get married. That's part of what makes it great.
The light drops fast between Midtown towers. Street closures happen at 8 a.m. on
a Saturday. A horse and carriage blocks your Central Park shot for four minutes.
We know this going in, so we don't panic. We plan around it. We scout the
ceremony location before the day, build buffer into every outdoor portrait block,
and find the angles that actually work in New York: the reflection off a SoHo
storefront window, the quiet corner of the Mall in Central Park before the
tourists arrive, the wide ceiling of a Tribeca loft when afternoon light
floods in from the west. Manhattan couples often pick venues for their
architecture or their view. We document what made you choose the place,
what it actually looks like when you're standing in it. Explore our portfolio
and get in touch. We'll walk you through the day.
Popular wedding venues in the area
The Pierre Hotel — Fifth Avenue ballroom with high ceilings and north-facing light that reads cleanly on camera.
Cipriani Wall Street — Converted 1842 bank building; the main hall's colonnades and chandeliers create strong sight lines.
The Rainbow Room — 65th-floor Rockefeller Center venue with wraparound city views; evening light from the skyline is the backdrop.
The Plaza Hotel — Grand Ballroom and smaller Palm Court rooms with detailed millwork and diffused natural light from Central Park South.
Tribeca Rooftop — Open-air rooftop venue with Hudson River views and the Manhattan skyline to the east.
Gotham Hall — Former Greenwich Savings Bank building; the dome and stained glass create a dramatic ceremony space.
The Glasshouse — Modern Chelsea venue with floor-to-ceiling glass and a terrace looking out over the West Side skyline.
Areas we cover include: Midtown, Tribeca, SoHo, Upper East Side, Central Park, Lower East Side.