Waterfront Wedding at Little Egg Harbor Yacht Club, Long Beach Island
Late September light, a tent on the water, and a celebration as timeless as the bay itself
Alex and Mike on the water's edge at sunset with Golden hour fading into blue sea
Alex and Mike have always belonged to the water. When we first met for their engagement session on the Asbury Park jetty, they told me about how they'd both grown up loving the beach, how the ocean was woven into the fabric of their relationship. Alex's mother had orchestrated their first meeting - inviting Mike to a family dinner without mentioning Alex would be there - and sparks flew immediately. They were both beach people, both drawn to the water, both rooted in this particular stretch of New Jersey coastline. So when it came time to plan their wedding, there was never any question about the kind of place they wanted. It had to be on the water. View their complete engagement gallery here.
Every detail thoughtfully considered - butterfly china, sea-green linens, and touches of whimsy throughout
Little Egg Harbor Yacht Club on Long Beach Island was the perfect answer. The venue sits right on the bay, with docks stretching out into the water and boats passing by throughout the day. Alex and Mike worked with planner Sarah Mastriano of A Lovely Universe to create what Sarah later called "not your average tristate area wedding" - every design detail was carefully considered, from the sea-green linens that matched the color of the bay to the pearl-dotted veil that echoed the texture of the water itself. The tent was positioned so that every table had a view of the water. Boats drifted past during dinner. The whole celebration felt like it was floating between land and sea.
That first look joy - the moment Alex and Mike saw each other on their wedding day
I understood their attachment to this place immediately. I grew up spending summers in Ocean City, just down the coast. My grandmother bought a beach house for our family when I was young, and the Jersey Shore became woven into the fabric of my childhood. There's a particular kind of belonging that comes from having a beach town that's yours - not the one you visit once on vacation, but the one where you know which ice cream shop opens earliest, where the best breakfast is, which stretch of beach is less crowded. Alex and Mike had that with Long Beach Island, the same way I had it with Ocean City. We spoke the same language of boardwalks and salt air and the way the ocean looks different every single day.
The tent on the bay - where land meets water and every table has an ocean view
Their wedding took place at the end of September, when summer crowds have thinned but the weather is still warm and the light turns golden earlier in the afternoon. We started the day with a first look on the yacht club docks, the bay stretching endlessly behind them. The joy on their faces when they saw each other was immediate and unguarded - all the camera-shyness Alex had worried about during the engagement session had evaporated completely. Before the ceremony, they shared private vows on the deck overlooking the water, just the two of them, an intimate moment before the public celebration began.
Sharing vows privately by the water before walking down the aisle.
The ceremony itself was brief - less than five minutes - but the emotion was palpable. They'd already said everything they needed to say to each other privately. This was the public declaration, the gathering of everyone they loved, the formal beginning of their marriage surrounded by family and friends under a tent with the bay as witness. Daybreak Flowers created arrangements that felt organic and slightly wild, and the butterfly-patterned china added an unexpected whimsy to the sea-green tablescape. The menu was inspired by their favorite NYC restaurants - thoughtful, personal, completely them.
The bay's texture mirrored in Alex's pearl-adorned veil - every detail echoing the water
As the sun began to set, we stole away for portraits. The light turned soft and blue, that brief perfect window when everything glows. There's something mythological about couples photographed by the sea - the ancient pull of water, the way humans have always been drawn to coastlines, the endless stories about what lives beneath the waves. Alex and Mike against the bay felt timeless, like they could have been standing there a hundred years ago or a hundred years from now. The ocean doesn't care about trends or aesthetics. It just is. And when you photograph people against it, they become part of that permanence.
First look on the Little Egg Harbor Yacht Club docks with the bay stretching behind them
The celebration continued long into the night - dancing under cafe lights, toasts that made everyone laugh and cry, the kind of joy that comes from bringing everyone you love to the place you love most. Alex and Mike had created exactly what they wanted: a wedding that felt like them, rooted in the water, surrounded by the people who matter most.
Alex dancing to Pink Pony Club - the dance floor erupting under cafe lights
View the complete gallery from Alex & Mike's Little Egg Harbor Yacht Club wedding
Planning & Design: Sarah Mastriano, A Lovely Universe
Floral Design: Daybreak Flowers | Videography: Margo Sees Stars | Venue: Little Egg Harbor Yacht Club | Band: Dart Collective | Paper Design: Charlie Whiskey Design, Minted Weddings | Hair & Makeup: Beauty on Location NJ
Alex and Mike's engagement session on Asbury Park's shores - where classical romance meets the timeless pull of the ocean
Alex and Mike's engagement session on Asbury Park's shores - where classical romance meets the timeless pull of the ocean
Alex & Mike during golden hour on the jetty rocks - Asbury Park's rugged coastline at its most romantic
I've always thought there's something mythological about couples photographed by the sea. Maybe it's the ancient pull of water, the way humans have always been drawn to coastlines, the way every culture has stories about what lives beneath the waves. Alex in her olive dress against those dark rocks, Mike's hand steady on her waist - there was something timeless about it, something that could have been photographed a hundred years ago or a hundred years from now. The ocean doesn't care about trends or aesthetics. It just is. And when you photograph people against it, they become part of that permanence.
Asbury Park's iconic Convention Hall overlooking the beach where Alex and Mike first met
There's something about the Jersey Shore that exists outside of reality television and summer tourist crowds. Asbury Park in particular holds a kind of magic - Bruce Springsteen magic, if you will - that belongs to the people who actually live here, who know the boardwalk in every season, who understand that the ocean isn't just a backdrop but a presence. Alex and Mike are those people. Alex's mother orchestrated it, inviting Mike without telling him Alex would be there. Sparks flew immediately. They were both beach lovers, both drawn to the water, both rooted in this particular stretch of New Jersey coastline. For their engagement session, there was nowhere else that made sense.
Barefoot on the rocks where the ocean meets the shore - pure Asbury Park magic
The afternoon light in Asbury Park has a particular quality in late summer. It's softer than you'd expect, filtered through ocean haze and the salt air. We started on the boardwalk where the iconic Convention Hall looms over the beach, that massive beaux-arts structure that's survived hurricanes and decades of changing tides. The boardwalk was alive with people - families eating ice cream, teenagers on bikes, couples strolling hand in hand. Alex and Mike moved through it all with ease, their nervous energy from earlier dissolving into something more natural. There's a comfort that comes from being photographed in a place you know intimately, where you don't have to perform being yourself because you already are.
Alex and Mike on the Asbury Park boardwalk - where the Jersey Shore meets timeless summer romance
But the real magic happened when we made our way down to the jetty. The rocks there are dark and volcanic-looking, creating this dramatic contrast against the pale sand and blue-green water. At low tide, tidal pools form in the crevices, little ecosystems of their own. Alex kicked off her shoes immediately - those rocks are treacherous in heels - and Mike followed suit. There's something about being barefoot on rocks by the ocean that strips away pretense. You have to pay attention to where you're stepping, you have to hold on to each other for balance, you have to be present. The camera-shyness Alex had worried about simply evaporated. She wasn't thinking about being photographed anymore; she was just navigating the rocks with Mike, laughing when the waves came in closer than expected, settling into the rhythm of the ocean.
Navigating the jetty together - a perfect metaphor captured in black and white
I've always thought there's something mythological about couples photographed by the sea. Maybe it's the ancient pull of water, the way humans have always been drawn to coastlines, the way every culture has stories about what lives beneath the waves. Alex in her olive dress against those dark rocks reminded me equally of a mermaid and Botticelli's Birth of Venus - that same quality of emerging from the ocean, of belonging to it. Mike's hand steady on her waist, grounding her to the earth while she seemed to float between worlds. There was something timeless about it, something that could have been photographed a hundred years ago or a hundred years from now. The ocean doesn't care about trends or aesthetics. It just is. And when you photograph people against it, they become part of that permanence.
As the sun started its descent, the light turned golden and warm, that brief perfect window before sunset when everything glows. We moved from the jetty back to the open beach. Convention Hall rose behind them, that grand old building that's been watching over Asbury Park since 1930, through prohibition and rock and roll and revival. The beach was emptying out, just a few stragglers left. Alex and Mike walked along the water's edge, waves lapping at their feet, completely at ease now. This was their beach, their town, their story.
Walking into their future on the sands of Asbury Park
What makes Asbury Park such a perfect location for engagement photography isn't just the iconic architecture or the beautiful beaches - though those certainly help. It's that the place has soul. It's been through cycles of boom and decay and renaissance. It's gritty and beautiful at once. The boardwalk still has that old-school Jersey Shore charm, but it's mixed with new restaurants and music venues and an arts scene that draws creative people from all over. For couples like Alex and Mike who are rooted here, who built their relationship in this place, the photographs carry all of that history and texture. You're not just capturing two people in love; you're capturing them in their context, their landscape, their home.
By the time we finished, Alex wasn't nervous anymore. She'd forgotten to be. That's what happens when you photograph people in a place they love, doing something as simple as walking on a beach they've walked a thousand times before. The engagement session did exactly what it was meant to do - it built trust, it helped them understand how I work, it showed them they could be themselves in front of the camera. More importantly, it gave them images of this moment in their lives, newly engaged, standing at the edge of the ocean in the place where their story began. Little did we know that when their wedding day came, we'd return to the water again. But that's a story for another time.
Alex and Mike returned to the water for their wedding at Little Egg Harbor Yacht Club on Long Beach Island. View the complete wedding gallery here.