Adventure For Love
Christina Joy Hartzell photographs elopements and intimate weddings under the name Adventure For Love, and her Moab page describes the town as the…
Elopements · Micro Weddings · Adventure Elopements
16 elopement photographers serving Utah couples planning an elopement or micro wedding.
Christina Joy Hartzell photographs elopements and intimate weddings under the name Adventure For Love, and her Moab page describes the town as the…
Elopements · Micro Weddings · Adventure Elopements
Aimée Flynn is a Southwest adventure wedding photographer who spends two to three months of every year working in Moab and treats the area as a sec…
Elopements · Adventure Elopements · Micro Weddings
Aubrey Elise is a ten-year veteran of the Utah wedding industry working out of Salt Lake City, with a service radius covering Park City, Ogden, Pro…
Elopements · Micro Weddings
Stefan and Leti, the husband-and-wife pair behind Backcountry Portraits, shoot elopements exclusively — no large receptions, no corporate work — an…
Elopements · Adventure Elopements · Destination
Operating out of Herriman on the southwest edge of the Salt Lake Valley, Becca has photographed more than 300 Utah weddings and elopements across e…
Elopements · Adventure Elopements · Destination
Marta Mannuzza runs By Mannuzza LLC from Moab itself — a genuine local rather than a traveling photographer passing through — covering Arches, Cany…
Elopements · Micro Weddings · Adventure Elopements
Courtney Blair splits her calendar between Salt Lake City and seasonal summers in Alaska, which shapes a practice built around mountaintop ceremoni…
Elopements · Adventure Elopements · Destination
Dani Purington has been photographing elopements since 2016 from her base in Salt Lake City, with Moab and Utah's national parks as her most freque…
Elopements · Adventure Elopements · Destination
Emily Dawn Photo serves Southern Utah and the wider Southwest with a focus on what the site calls wedding weekends — multi-day celebrations at scen…
Elopements · Micro Weddings · Destination
Forever to the Moon is the adventure elopement studio of Utah photographer Alexandra Amante, who describes her aesthetic as simple and natural with…
Elopements · Adventure Elopements · Destination
Kaci Lou photographs small weddings and elopements from Park City, deliberately limiting the number of weddings she takes each year to keep the wor…
Elopements · Micro Weddings · Destination
Kyle and Tori are a married photography team and self-described Zion National Park locals whose niche is, in their words, approachable adventure: e…
Elopements · Adventure Elopements · Destination
Marina Rey occupies the accessible end of Utah's elopement pricing spectrum, with published starting rates of $850 for two hours of local coverage…
Elopements · Courthouse · Adventure Elopements
Sindy Mag photographs weddings and elopements from St. George, the gateway city to Zion, Snow Canyon, and the rest of Utah's southwestern red rock…
Elopements · Destination
Tai Lee shoots weddings, micro-weddings, elopements, and family sessions across Utah from a Northern Utah base, with documented work stretching fro…
Elopements · Micro Weddings · Courthouse
Abbi and Callen Hearne built one of the better-known names in adventure wedding photography from their primary residence in Moab, pairing the South…
Elopements · Adventure Elopements · Destination
Utah's five national parks are the reason most couples elope here, and every one of them treats a wedding ceremony — even just two people and a photographer — as a permitted special use. Arches, Canyonlands and Zion each restrict ceremonies to designated locations and limit group size; Zion in particular books its iconic spots well in advance. Commercial photography on park land can carry its own permit requirements, so hire someone who already knows the ranger desk.
The marriage license itself is simple: any Utah county clerk issues it, both partners appear in person, and there's no waiting period — couples often grab one in Moab the morning before a Dead Horse Point ceremony. You'll need an officiant and it must be returned for recording after the ceremony.
Desert timing is its own skill. From May through September, midday temperatures regularly pass 100°F in the red rock country, which pushes real ceremony windows to first light or the last hour before sunset — exactly when the sandstone goes copper anyway. Winter is Utah's secret season: empty trails, soft light, and Delicate Arch without a crowd.
Planning budgets too? See elopement packages in Utah.