Elopement Photography

Four Ways To Get Married In Vermont (That I’ll Happily Drop Everything For)

April 21, 2026

hey there, I'm ali.

I am a toddler & dog mom, chocolate lover, avid smutty fiction reader, get-me-outside girl, and heart-driven photographer.

Listen, if there’s love and down-to-earth humans involved, odds are pretty good I’m already reaching for my camera. And goodness knows, if you’re getting married in Vermont, your options for intimate wedding locations are… plentiful. To say the least.

You can opt for an elopement in the mountains, where the air feels a little thinner and the wind runs off with half of your vows. 

You can roll with a barn that has hosted a hundred harvests and now, somehow, inexplicably— a wedding.

You can make this intimate wedding photographer’s heart very happy and host the backyard celebration to end all backyard celebrations, complete with cafe lights and a dance floor made entirely of grass. 

Or, you can go full Vermont on us and hold your wedding at an inn or lodge where the whole guest list ends up recounting the evening’s events over coffee the next morning. 

Needless to say, there are no shortage of beautiful Vermont wedding ‘venues’ (and I use that word loosely)— especially if you’re on the hunt for intimate wedding locations that feel like they belong to the two of you and no one else.

“So, what is it about intimate wedding locations that you love so much?,” you might ask

After photographing weddings here for a good long while, I’ve noticed a pattern. There are four kinds of wedding days that make me say an enthusiastic: absolutely, tell me more. 

And they all tend to have one thing in common: the place and the people feel inseparable. Like the wedding could only have happened right there, in that exact corner of Vermont— where the setting and the story almost feel like they belong to each other.

The Small Gathering Wedding

[AKA, the kind of wedding where everyone in the room would give a speech if you let them]

I think Layne would agree with me when I say that marrying an art teacher has its perks. Namely, when you end up with a wedding that looks like a finished masterpiece before the bride and groom even step into the frame. And once they do, well… it only gets better. 

Kayla may as well submit her wedding day for a place in the Louvre for how much intention and artistry she poured into it. From the thrifted tableware to the embroidered welcome banner to the art nouveau-inspired invitation suite, every single detail was a lesson in thoughtfulness.

Kayla and Layne gathered their twenty person guest list at the E.V. Hamilton, a cozy cottage and barn in Stowe, VT that they rented on— wait for it— AirBnB

(No, seriously. If you weren’t aware of the whole rustic-bed-and-breakfast-turned-Vermont-wedding-venue situation before, you definitely are now. And also… there’s a blog post for that.)

Rustic Vermont barn covered in climbing vines with stacked firewood at a cozy Airbnb wedding venue in Elmore.
Black and white view of a small outdoor wedding ceremony through a farmhouse window in rural Vermont.
Outdoor reception table set with vintage blue china and wildflower arrangements at one of Vermont’s intimate wedding locations.
Hand embroidered welcome banner hanging on a rustic barn door at a small Vermont wedding celebration.
Garden reception table surrounded by summer flowers at one of Vermont’s most charming intimate wedding locations.
Wide view of backyard garden reception table set for dinner at a cozy Vermont intimate wedding location.
Metal bucket filled with paper parasols for guests at an outdoor ceremony at an intimate wedding location in Vermont.
Art nouveau inspired wedding invitation suite with floral illustration and vow booklet for Kayla and Layne’s Vermont wedding.

Vendors | Cake: Blue House Bakeshop | Bride’s Dress: Jenny Yoo Sparrow Floral Wedding Gown from Anthropologie | Venue: E.V. Hamilton | Catering: Sweet & Savory | Chair Rentals: Vermont Tent Company

Kayla and Layne have walked through more together than most couples do before they ever make it to the end of the aisle. They’ve experienced enough cumulative losses to make this moment feel even more significant.

I think that’s what I love most about being an intimate wedding photographer. 

When the guest list is cut down to your nearest and dearest and the setting feels more like a home than a wedding venue, there’s real estate for the emotions of the day to exist in full. You let the hugs last longer. You’re not so quick to wipe away the tears. The people gathered around you aren’t just guests; they’re the people who helped get you here.

Even the sky on Layne and Kayla’s wedding day seemed to be in on the plot. Smoke drifting down from the Canadian wildfires left the whole afternoon wrapped in this soft haze that made the light feel almost filmy, like the day itself had been dipped in nostalgia.

Days with this much emotion built into them are exactly what intimate wedding locations are built for.

Wedding guest holding thrifted tableware at intimate wedding in Stowe, Vermont.
Black and white photo of the bride walking through a lush Vermont garden holding her bouquet with sunlight filtering through the trees.
Guests gathered around a long wooden table for dinner surrounded by wildflowers and garden beds at an intimate backyard wedding in Vermont.
Bride walking toward groom during an emotional first look in a Vermont garden wedding setting.
Groom wipes bride's tear during intimate wedding first look in Stowe, Vermont.
Black and white photo of the groom hugging two loved ones during an emotional moment at the outdoor wedding reception.
Colorful summer bridal bouquet with white roses, orange zinnias, and soft greenery held up against a pale sky.
Vintage style wedding cake topped with cherries, strawberries, and orange slices displayed on an outdoor dessert table with flowers.
Bride and groom standing close together while holding the bride’s bouquet beneath a flowing veil in warm evening light.
Bride and groom holding each other beneath a gold ceremony arch decorated with white and orange flowers overlooking a quiet Vermont countryside field.
Black and white portrait of the groom smiling at the bride as her veil drifts across the frame during quiet wedding portraits.
Bride and groom walking away together down a garden path through tall summer flowers and greenery after their ceremony.

The Runaway Wedding

[AKA, a wedding day that feels more like an adventure than an event]

If you think about it, being an elopement photographer is one of the greatest privileges in the world. Two humans-in-love decide to scrap the guest list entirely and run off to get married… but then, inexplicably, they invite little old me and my Super 8 camera to tag along. 

Lucky for them, I’m licensed to marry people, too— which means it can quite literally just be the three of us (and the dogs, of course)— escaping to whatever Vermont elopement location their little hearts desire.

Gabs and Sam chose to say their ‘I do’s’ (and me to say to ‘I now pronounce you husband and wife’ somewhere between shutter clicks) at The Inn at Mountain View Farm in Burke, VT.

And as is often the case with a good elopement, the location choice was anything but random.

Burke is a big mountain biking town, which just so happens to be one of Gabs and Sam’s favorite ways to spend time together. On any given weekend, there’s a decent chance you can find them out there somewhere: pedaling up a hill, flying down the other side, and calling it a (good) day. 

So getting married here didn’t feel like some cinematic decision based exclusively on landscape and vibes. It felt more like the natural extension of a life they were already building together— just with slightly nicer clothes and a photographer third-wheeling the whole thing.

Bride and groom walking across a rolling green hill during their Vermont elopement at a quiet countryside intimate wedding location.
Bride holding her bouquet by a sunlit doorway while her dog waits beside her, a quiet getting-ready moment
Dog running down wooden steps as the groom follows behind, a playful candid moment during a relaxed Vermont elopement day.
Red barn and orchard trees at a rustic Vermont wedding venue known for scenic intimate wedding locations.
Groom reacting emotionally during a first look in the forest before a Vermont intimate wedding ceremony photographed by an intimate wedding photographer.
Newly married couple twirling together in a pine forest as their dog runs between them during their Vermont elopement at one of the region’s most beautiful intimate wedding locations.
Bride and groom sharing a tearful laugh during their first look in the woods at a secluded Vermont wedding venue.
Bride and groom smiling in warm golden light during a Vermont elopement, captured by a documentary-style elopement photographer in a quiet garden setting.

Vendors | Venue: Inn at Mountain View Farm | Cake: Red Poppy Cakery | Bride’s Ring: Lamarche Fine Jewelry

One of the questions I ask couples in my Story Canvas is what inspires them most. Sounds, smells, songs, feelings— anything that they find occupying their mind lately is fair game. I take those answers, tuck them into the back of my elopement photographer mind, and look for every opportunity to weave their references into the photos.

Gabs answered that she’d been particularly inspired by the way light hits trees when the forest is mossy and full of pines. For Sam, it was getting his hands dirty making things and the unmistakable smell of a workshop. (I’m married to a woodworker myself, so maple shavings are basically my signature scent.)

Both of these responses made for a dang good guide to photographing their day.

You can see it in the moments right after their first look, when the forest light wrapped around them exactly the way Gabs described. And later, when Sam was outside washing their pup before we headed to the farm— sleeves rolled up, hands in the water, very much in his element.

With no timeline breathing down your neck and no room full of guests waiting for the next thing to happen, the small, seemingly ordinary pieces of life (like picking burrs out of the train of your bride’s dress, naturally) have more space to show up. And everything about you that screams ‘meant to be,’ becomes all the more obvious.

Which, if you ask me— your friendly neighborhood elopement photographer— is the magic of it.

Close-up of bride and groom touching foreheads beneath sunlit trees during a Vermont elopement photographed by a documentary-style elopement photographer.
Bride leaning her head on the groom’s shoulder in a misty forest portrait after their intimate Vermont wedding ceremony.
Newlywed couple embracing at dusk in a grassy Vermont field after their ceremony at one of the state’s most romantic intimate wedding locations.
Bride and groom exchanging vows beneath a wooden arbor overlooking Vermont mountains at sunset, photographed by an intimate wedding photographer at a scenic Vermont wedding venue.
Bride and groom laughing beneath a wooden arbor overlooking Vermont mountains during their intimate wedding ceremony.
Groom playfully spraying water at his dog outside a farmhouse during a relaxed Vermont elopement day at one of the state’s intimate wedding locations.
Bride sitting on a picnic blanket showing off her wedding ring while the groom takes a photo during a relaxed Vermont elopement celebration outdoors.
Groom adjusting the bride’s dress in a grassy field during a Vermont intimate wedding photographed by a documentary-style elopement photographer.
Bride holding a woven picnic basket after her Vermont elopement ceremony at a scenic countryside intimate wedding location.
Couple cutting a heart-shaped “Just Married” cake from Red Poppy Cakery during their intimate Vermont elopement picnic.

The Inheritance Wedding

[AKA, when love and lineage share the same air]

As someone who grew up in Vermont— wandering the Shelburne Museum on school field trips, running through Shelburne Farms, and now bringing my son here to explore— documenting this history-rich wedding at Brick House felt like more than a celebration. It felt like stepping into the living continuation of a story that’s been written here for generations. 

Electra and Watson’s high-class wedding was nothing short of an homage to Vermont soil and American history. 

Mother and family member helping bride place heirloom lace veil before ceremony at Brick House wedding in Shelburne, Vermont.
Seasonal wildflower arrangement displayed inside the historic Brick House during elegant Vermont museum wedding.
Bride in heirloom silk wedding dress and pearl necklace standing by window light with her groom inside the historic Brick House at Shelburne Museum.
Bride and groom standing with family members in classic black-and-white portrait during historic Brick House wedding at Shelburne Museum in Vermont.
Bride adjusting heirloom veil while wearing vintage diamond rings and pearl necklace during legacy wedding at Brick House in Shelburne, Vermont.
Bride holding bouquet while standing on the tree-lined drive at the Brick House, Shelburne Museum — an iconic intimate Vermont wedding location.
Bride and groom dancing together on the tree-lined driveway leading to the Brick House during an intimate Vermont wedding celebration.
Bride holding bouquet and kissing groom reflected through historic window panes at the Brick House during romantic Vermont museum wedding.

Vendors || Wedding Coordinator: Harlow Dahlia Events | @harlowdahliaevents || Venue: The Brick House at Shelburne Museum || Florist: Blomma Flicka Flowers @blommaflickadesign || Catering: Sugarsnap | @sugarsnapvt || Band: The Bodacious Supreme || Cake: Sweet Simone’s | @sweet_simones || Rentals: Vermont Tent Company | @vttent

Electra is the great-great-great-granddaughter of Electra Havemeyer Webb, the founder of the Shelburne Museum and a woman who had an uncanny eye for the beauty of everyday life (which, frankly, makes her my spiritual predecessor). And in a moment that felt almost too perfect for words, my bride Electra wore her mother’s wedding dress and the original Electra’s veil—now preserved in the Shelburne Museum’s collection.

Electra’s entire ensemble carried a narrative of inheritance. 

These weren’t simply beautiful pieces chosen and styled for a wedding day. They were objects that had been waiting—ever so patiently—for the next person in the lineage to fall in love.

The beaded bodice, the soft silk skirt, the pearl necklace layered at her collarbone… it was like she had stepped directly into the family archive.

Weddings like this aren’t just milestones of two people deciding to spend their lives together. They’re reminders that love rarely begins in a single moment. It grows out of the people who came before, the places that shaped us, and the stories we inherit whether we realize it or not.

When a wedding day carries that level of history with it, documenting it feels less like photography and more like stewardship.

Bride and groom laughing while guests toss rose petals outside the Brick House ceremony at Shelburne Museum wedding in Vermont.
Bride in heirloom silk wedding dress and lace veil holding hands with groom in historic library at the Brick House, Shelburne Museum wedding in Vermont.
Bride twirling groom while holding bouquet inside the historic Brick House at Shelburne Museum wedding reception in Vermont.
Bride lifting the hem of her heirloom wedding dress while walking with groom down the tree-lined drive at Shelburne Museum during an intimate Vermont wedding.
Father photographing bride in heirloom dress inside historic Shelburne Museum home during Vermont wedding morning.
Newlyweds sharing a kiss in the back of a vintage car after their Shelburne Museum wedding in Vermont.

The Backyard Wedding

[AKA, the house that raised you, throwing the biggest party it has ever seen]

When I tell you this was the backyard wedding dreams are made of, I’m saying it with my chest.

Hannah and Carter got married at Hannah’s grandmother’s house in Greensboro, VT because it was where the couple spent a lot of their time getting to know each other. The house that had already gotten to witness their beginning was now getting to host the main event… and in autumn, no less. 

Be still, my beating heart, much? This legacy-loving, beauty-in-the-ordinary aficionado was living for this unsuspecting intimate wedding location (and for Hannah’s grandmother, who served as the emotional epicenter of the entire day).

Mother leaning into grandmother during emotional ceremony moment at outdoor Vermont backyard wedding in Greensboro.
Grandmother smiling at bride while helping adjust veil during emotional getting-ready moment at backyard wedding in Greensboro, Vermont.
Elderly couple laughing together during backyard Vermont wedding cocktail hour in Greensboro with family gathered around.
Wedding guest smiling out car window while arriving at backyard wedding reception in Greensboro, Vermont.

Vendors | Florals Florals: Blomma Flicka Flowers | Reception Music: EmaLou & The Beat | Ceremony Music: Catamount Quartet | Hair and Makeup: The Rehair Shop | Reception Venue: Circus Smirkus

As a documentary wedding photographer, nothing gets me going quite as much as having my pick of the emotion to choose from. During the entire ceremony, I had my head on a swivel, trying to click my shutter fast enough to catch every reaction: misty-eyed parents, cousins leaning into each other, friends laughing through their tears, Hannah’s grandmother watching the whole thing unfold from her seat like she already knew this moment had been on its way for years.

And just when you thought the day couldn’t get more Vermont…

The ceremony wrapped up and guests slowly wandered down the road toward the reception, with the help of a local non-profit youth circus to help them get safely (and with pomp and circumstance) from Point A to Point B. 

They turned the wedding’s walk to thee backyard wedding reception into something that felt like a cross between a hometown parade and the most joyful wedding procession imaginable.

And standing there watching it all unfold (and getting it down on film because this wedding practically begged for it!), it was hard to imagine the day happening anywhere else. The whole thing— the slow morning getting ready with grandma, the ceremony, the parade, the tent party after— fit together in that way that only happens when the setting and the story have clearly known each other for a long time.

Care to see how this one played out from start to finish? Read more about Hannah and Carter’s backyard wedding here.

Bride and groom lead wedding guests across a field holding an embroidered “Hannah & Carter” banner while walking their dog.
Bride and groom in formal attire share a kiss in a grassy Vermont field at golden hour, rolling hills and autumn trees in the background.
Fall floral arrangement with peach dahlias, grasses, and hydrangea in a brass vase on a wooden sideboard beneath a large antique copper tray.
Groom in a black tuxedo lifts the bride’s long train as she walks ahead through a wooded clearing.
Close-up black and white portrait of a bride smiling softly through her veil.
Close-up of an embroidered wedding banner with ribbon streamers reading “Hannah & Carter,” carried during a wedding procession.
Bride wrapped in a shawl laughs with friends gathered around a table during the evening reception.
Small coconut wedding cake decorated with fresh dahlias sits on a white cake stand with string lights glowing in the background.
Groom spins an older woman joyfully across the dance floor inside a tented wedding reception.

So, which intimate wedding location in Vermont is the right one?!

The short answer? Probably whichever one makes the most sense for the love you’re already living.

The weddings that still live rent-free in my mind long after the memory cards are backed up and the gallery is delivered always seem to share the same strange little quality:

The intimate wedding location doesn’t feel chosen so much as… inevitable. Like the couple and the setting had already been circling each other for years.

A backyard where the two of you became friends, and then more-than-friends. A museum built by someone in the family line, where half of the guests already know which staircase creaks. A mountain town with a trailhead that knows your bike treads better than its own dirt.

When the setting and the story recognize each other like that, the wedding stops feeling like an event and starts feeling more like the continuation of something that was already underway.

Which, if you ask me, is a pretty good way to begin a life together.

If you’re in the early stages of planning a Vermont wedding and still figuring out which corner of the state your story belongs in, I’d love to hear about it. You can join my 2027 wedding waitlist here to be the first to know when my books open.

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Monthly(ish) musings on life, motherhood, photography and more. 

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It’s those small, familiar moments that you’ll want to remember when the toys
are packed away and the
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the mess, the motion,
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Love Stories

001   I do's
002.  Motherhood
003.  Life with littles

001 I do's
002 Motherhood
003 Life with littles

Becoming a mother transformed the way I see and photograph the world — with a slowed-down feel focused on the sensory story of a life well-lived and even-more-loved.

I’m drawn to mediums that ask us to slow down—to notice light, rhythm, and what’s unfolding instead of what’s posed.

This is not curated perfection. This is memory made visible.

My style behind the lens: Whether I'm looking for bugs with your kiddos, snuggling your newborn while you change outfits, or exploring Vermont nature with you and your love, your session will feel fun, effortless, and like you're hanging with a friend.

My style behind the image: With a nod to classic film and a vibrant punch, my photography style is a little grainy, a little earthy, and always nostalgic.  

My style behind the books: When I'm not taking your picture, I'm probably snuggled up with my dogs, my kiddo, and a spicy romantic fantasy novel (IYKYK).

a Vermont family and wedding photographer who believes in preserving the texture of a loved-in life.

Hi, I'm Ali.

 photographer / field notetaker / keeper of the blur

Love stories? Here's Mine

001

Becoming a mother transformed the way I see and photograph the world — with a slowed-down feel focused on the sensory story of a life well-lived and even-more-loved.

I photograph the loose curl, the soft thunder of little feet, the vows said through tears with your toes in the moss.

This is not curated perfection. This is memory made visible.

a Vermont family and wedding photographer who believes in preserving the texture of a lived-in life.

Hi, I'm Ali.

photographer / field notetaker / keeper of the blur

Love stories? Here's Mine

001