You’re done waiting for permission
You want to practice the work before calling yourself “destination”
You’re drawn to film, motion, texture, and storytelling over trends
The work you want to be known for doesn’t match what you’re currently booking
Real locations. Real pacing. Real practice.
Guided shooting days in thoughtfully chosen environments, built to help you practice destination and elopement-style work without the pressure of a full retreat.
You’ll leave with portfolio-ready imagery, hands-on experience, and a clearer sense of how to build toward the work you want to book.
This is where momentum starts.
Multi-day, immersive experiences
Designed for creatives who want to slow down, step away, and reconnect with the work they actually want to be making.
Small groups. Intentional locations.
Time for shooting, learning, reflection, and honest conversation about where you’re headed and why.
This is for stepping out of the noise and into clarity.
Film-forward learning for creatives drawn to slower work.
Education rooted in film, Super 8, and intentional storytelling–designed for those who want their work to feel lived-in.
You’ll learn how to integrate film into your process, build portfolios with intention.
This is about craft, patience, and long-term vision.
I know this season because I’ve lived it.
I was booking work that paid the bills while dreaming about elopements in places that inspired me–and trying to figure out how film and Super 8 could actually fit into a real, sustainable business.
Field & Film Co. is for creatives who want to book more intentional elopements, travel with purpose, and use film and Super 8 in a way that feels natural, aligned, and true to their work.
Inside this map, you’ll learn how to:
✔ Shift from being a “local-only” photographer into someone who books work in places you’re drawn to
✔ Build confidence working in unfamiliar environments
✔ Create momentum toward destination bookings — even if you’re early in your journey
Take an afternoon to study the map, and you’ll finally understand what actually moves the needle toward destination work — and what doesn’t.