Atmosphere first
The site makes room for mood, movement, and visual pacing instead of treating photos like tiny thumbnails inside service boxes.
Part portfolio, part visual journal, part booking site - with enough structure to get hired and enough character to feel like a real artist's brand.
The work naturally moves between people, atmosphere, travel, and flight. That mix is exactly what makes the brand memorable.
Not overly luxury. Not sterile. Not a one-size-fits-all photographer template. The direction here is more editorial, more cinematic, and more image-first, while still staying practical for clients who need to inquire quickly.
That means separate portfolio pages, large imagery, restrained copy, and a dedicated hire page instead of squeezing everything into a single scroll.
The site makes room for mood, movement, and visual pacing instead of treating photos like tiny thumbnails inside service boxes.
Events, portraits, aviation, and travel each get a dedicated page, which makes the whole brand feel more intentional and less generic.
As Marissa shoots more, each section can expand into deeper sub-galleries without redesigning the whole site from scratch.
Start by replacing the placeholders on the events and portraits pages with strong real images. After that, the best expansion path is to split aviation and travel into more specific sub-pages if those galleries grow.