Some weddings feel like they were built for the camera.
This wasn’t one of them — and that’s exactly what made it extraordinary.
Lakyn and John chose a private backyard in Wisconsin Dells for their wedding day. No ballroom. No banquet hall. Just the people they love most, a wooden floral arch, string lights strung between the trees, and the kind of long summer afternoon that turns into the kind of evening you’ll spend the rest of your life trying to remember exactly.
They’re both track coaches. The people in those white chairs weren’t just family and friends — they were athletes, assistant coaches, parents of kids they’ve pushed through early morning practices and late-night meets, colleagues who know what it means to show up for something bigger than yourself. That’s the room Lakyn and John got married in. You could feel it.
It was intimate by design. And it was one of the most emotionally honest days we’ve had the privilege of documenting.
Getting Ready
The morning unfolded quietly — the way the best ones do.
Lakyn had her hair done in a warm room, pearl braids threaded carefully while the light came through soft and unhurried. Her dress hung waiting. Details like these — the texture of the room, the quiet before everything begins — are the parts couples almost never get to see. They’re the prelude to everything that follows.
We moved through the morning slowly and intentionally. Not pushing toward the ceremony. Just paying attention.
The Ceremony
The ceremony was held beneath a wooden arch wrapped in florals, white chairs lining the aisle, lush green trees filling the background. There’s something about an outdoor ceremony in a private space that strips away everything performative. The formality falls off. People cry more easily. They lean in close. A toddler wanders into the aisle and reaches for a hand.
Lakyn and John said their vows in that open air, surrounded by the people who know their full story. The kind of ceremony where you feel the actual weight of what’s happening — two lives choosing each other in front of everyone they love.
We worked in both color and black and white throughout the day. The B&W frames carry a timelessness that color can’t always reach.
Couple Portraits
After the ceremony, we stole Lakyn and John away. Twenty minutes. A creek not far from the property, soft afternoon light, and two people finally exhaling on the other side of the moment they’d been building toward.
Lakyn looked up at John and laughed — the way she probably laughs a thousand times in private — and that was the frame. Not posed. Not directed. Real.
Family & the Little Moments
Some of the most honest photographs from a wedding day don’t involve the couple at all. A groom with his parents in the green summer light. A bride holding a small child in a wooded garden. Children playing on a gravel driveway at golden hour, completely unaware of the celebration happening around them.
These are the frames that turn a wedding gallery into a family archive. Thirty years from now, the child in that photograph will be a grown adult. This is why we photograph everything.
The Reception
As the sun dropped, the tent glowed. String lights, warm air, and the kind of energy that only happens when people are genuinely glad to be there. Guests gathered on the lawn for a group game — the couple at the center, a circle of laughter forming around them. Later, there was dancing. Close, uninhibited, real.
When the Team Showed Up
Here’s the part you don’t plan for — and the part you never forget.
Late in the night, Lakyn and John’s entire track team showed up. Athletes who’d run their hearts out for these two coaches. Kids who’d been pushed through early alarms, cold practices, and competitions where the margin between winning and not was a tenth of a second. They came because that’s what you do when the people who believed in you finally get their moment.
Someone lit a fire. And the night got longer in the best possible way. A campfire at the end of a backyard wedding, surrounded by the people you’ve poured yourself into — that’s not a detail. That’s the whole story.
Lakyn + John
It was a privilege to be there for all of it. Thank you for trusting us with your day — and for the reminder that the best wedding memories aren’t made in ballrooms.
If you’re planning an intimate Wisconsin wedding and looking for a photographer who will slow down, pay attention, and document what actually matters — we’d love to hear about your plans.
Get in touch at james-stokes.com/contact