ZEON & HEIZE
Primary Colors, Quiet Hours
Heize and Zeon stepped into their ROM week with a clear idea of what they wanted it to feel like: fun, film-leaning, and true to the home they’re building.
We kept the work simple. Gentle direction when they needed it, and plenty of space for them to fall back into their own rhythm.
They’ve known each other for more than 10 years, together for 6, with a dynamic that’s easy to read: Heize bright and outgoing, Zeon more introverted, both steady in the same frame. The plan held two distinct pockets of time. A night street session for that urban, vintage edge they were curious about. The throughline was aesthetic and intention: mid-century Bauhaus energy, primary colors, and a film texture that felt playful without turning performative.
A NEW CHAPTER, IN THEIR OWN PALETTE.
JUNRONG & WEILING
Small Plans, Real Light
Junrong and Weiling came in with a simple ask: something natural, something that felt like them.
We kept the session honest and loose, focused on documenting the setup, the moment itself, and everything around it that couldn’t be recreated.
What mattered was clarity: letting the two of them move without over-directing, and holding enough space for the moment to land. No heavy staging, no overproduction. Just two people choosing a pace that fit, and letting the ordinary places become part of the memory.
UNFORCED. UNCOMPLICATED. FULLY THEIRS
XUAN & XIAOWEI
SHANGRI-LA RASA SENTOSA
The Day in Full Color
Xuan and Xiaowei planned a wedding that made room for both tradition and play, without losing the thread of what mattered.
Our approach was straightforward: keep it candid, stay close to the real moments, and save anything staged for when the timeline allowed.
The day carried distinct movements, starting with the morning energy of the gatecrash and veiling, then settling into a quieter, intentional first look. Later, the pace picked up again with the tea ceremony, followed by the solemnization, and then a short pocket of time carved out for couple portraits before the dinner flow took over. With around 200 guests and an outdoor night setting, the priority was always practicality: coverage that stayed natural, moved fast when it needed to, and focused on family and friends as much as the couple. When the evening arrived, the atmosphere shifted into celebration, with LED lights and sparklers framing the march-in, and yum seng carrying the room into its loudest, happiest stretch.
A FULL DAY, HELD WITH EASE.
SUTHAN & ADELE
CHURCH OF THE HOLY TRINITY / SRI SENPAGA VINAYAGAR TEMPLE
A Wedding, Then Another
Suthan and Adele’s wedding story held more than one chapter, and it carried the kind of joy that doesn’t need to be forced.
We kept our approach simple: stay close to what was real, and let the day move at its own pace.
They first reached out looking for photography and videography that would document emotions, candid moments, and the people who showed up for them. Their church ceremony anchored the day, with Mass, and the energy of a room that knew this mattered. In between the formalities, there were the small, honest exchanges that make a wedding feel lived-in: a glance held a second longer, laughter breaking through, hands finding each other again. Across both dates, the story stayed consistent: community close, feelings visible, and a couple choosing each other with a steadiness that read clearly on camera.
QUIETLY FULL. COMPLETELY THEIRS.
WONG FAMILY
Home Ground
This session was about returning to the place where a family first learned how to be a family.
We approached it simply: give everyone enough space to settle in, then let the real interactions lead.
Hannah shared that this mattered because parents are not getting younger, and the photos needed to hold more than smiles. Eight adults and four kids, gathered at the parents’ place, with the park downstairs and those familiar brick walls in view. They wanted a mix of fly-on-the-wall moments and gently posed frames, plus a few clean portraits of each family unit. Comfort was part of the goal too, especially for siblings who are shy and introverted, so the pace stayed unhurried, with clear posing guidance when it helped and breathing room when it did not. What came through was warmth, movement, and the kind of laughter you only get when people are on their own ground.
A FAMILY, HELD IN THE ORDINARY.
THADDEUS & SHUENLI
Chill, Honest, Documentary
Shuenli and Thaddeus came in with a simple ask: keep it real, keep it relaxed, and let the session feel like them.
For this pre-wedding, we kept the approach documentary. More space to breathe, less performing for the camera.
They met in church and their energy is unforced. Chill vibes, movies, eating out, and just being together. They were clear that they wanted guidance, but not something overly staged. A natural, interview-style video about their relationship, and daytime photos with greenery in the frame. Minimal outfits, nothing too “wedding gown” and more like a quiet yes to who they already are.
What mattered most was that the photos and film would hold real memories. Not just nice images, but something that would translate into their wedding season and still feel honest when they look back, even years later.
SIMPLE PEOPLE. TRUE MOMENTS.
AARON & DULCENA
CHURCH OF SAINTS PETER & PAUL / CHUI HUAY LIM CLUB / LAWN AT HORT PARK
THREE PLACES, ONE YES
Aaron and Dulcena’s day moved with a kind of steady joy, the kind that doesn’t need to be rushed to feel real.
We approached it the way we always try to: documenting, not staging, and letting the day keep its own pace.
It began at the Church of Saints Peter & Paul, where the space itself set a tone of reverence and focus, and where their attention kept returning to each other, even as the room filled around them. From there, the day opened up at Chui Huay Lim Club, shifting into something warmer and more communal, with laughter, toasts, and the easy momentum of being surrounded by the people who know them best. As the light softened, we ended at The Lawn at HortPark, where the air and greenery gave the last stretch of the day a breathier, quieter feel, like an exhale after all the build up.
Aaron and Dulcena didn’t try to perform a perfect day. They simply lived it, and that was more than enough.
HELD, CELEBRATED, AND FULLY PRESENT
CHAOXIAN & LIXUAN
PARKROYAL COLLECTION MARINA BAY
LOUD HOMEBODIES,
REAL MOMENTS
Chaoxian and Lixuan’s day wasn’t about performing. It was about feeling like themselves, even with a camera nearby.
We approached it the way they hoped for: documenting, not staging, and creating enough space for the awkwardness to soften into something honest.
They told us they’re homebodies at heart, but loud in the best way, the kind of people who’ll play pickleball, go out partying, and still choose the quiet familiarity of each other. What they wanted this time was simpler: a photographer who could bring an extroverted calm, keep things real, and help them look back on the day through images that don’t feel posed.
They also carried a small piece of origin with them. They met in university at NUS, in Sheares Hall, and they wanted to make a quick trip back there for photos. Just enough to mark where it started, before returning to the flow of the day and a dinner reception that stayed casual, unforced, and true.
REAL, UNGUARDED, REMEMBERED