The Upgrade: A New Booking Experience for 2026

The New Standard: Streamlining Your Session Experience

For the last year, booking a session usually meant a game of tag via email or Instagram DMs. "Are you free Tuesday?" "No, how about Thursday?" "How much is the deposit?"

That works for a hobby, but not for the level of service I want to provide for my clients.

My goal has always been to deliver a cinematic, magazine-quality experience—from the first click on my website to the final print in your hands. Today, I’m excited to launch a completely new Booking & Investment platform that matches that quality.

What’s New?

1. Real-Time Availability No more guessing. You can now view my live calendar for Winter and Spring 2026. If a date is open on the site, it’s yours. You can secure your spot instantly without waiting for a reply.

2. The New "Investment" Menu I’ve restructured my pricing to be completely transparent. Whether you need "The Recruit" (a 45-minute, high-impact sports session for college commits) or "The Editorial" (the full 2-hour Vanity Fair-style senior experience), you know exactly what you are getting and what it costs upfront.

3. Paperless & Seamless Contracts, model releases, and deposits are all handled digitally at the time of booking. It takes less than 3 minutes to secure your session, leaving us more time to focus on creative planning and location scouting.

Why the Change? As demand has grown for high-contrast sports editorials and senior portraits in the Olympia area, my calendar has tightened up. This new system ensures that the families who are ready to book can lock in their preferred dates immediately.

Looking Ahead to Spring 2026 The rainy season gives us some of the most dramatic lighting for sports portraits (that moody, overcast Pacific Northwest vibe), but slots are limited.

If you are a Class of 2026 Senior or an athlete looking to update your media day content, now is the time to look.

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The Sea of Sameness: Why Your Senior Photos Deserve More Than a Field.

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A Splash of Hope on Plum St: Why the "You Are Not Alone" Mural Still Matters