Documenting Fleeting Moments of Immense Importance
Editorial wedding photography on the California Riviera.
The most important photographs are the ones no one saw being made.
Paul Von Rieter works the way a good guest behaves: present, attentive, never in the way. The pictures that matter, a father's glance, the laughter that escapes between toasts, happen only when the camera has been forgotten.
Told by place, kept by families.
Everything considered, nothing performed.
Preparation happens long before the ceremony: the angle of the west light on the terrace, the order of the toasts, the grandmother who will not want to be asked twice.
The pictures are editorial in their composure and effortless in their feel: unrushed, unguarded, made quietly while the day carries on. Nothing staged that could be witnessed, nothing witnessed that was not worth keeping.
The Correspondence
A conversation first, with the couple, the family, or their planner. Venues are scouted in advance, schedules are walked through, and every detail of the day is understood before it arrives.
The Day
Paul attends the way a good guest does: dressed for the room, in step with the planner and the household, photographing everything and interrupting nothing.
The Archive
Delivery is only the beginning. What leaves the studio is an object, not a file transfer, and the family's archive is looked after long after the wedding day.
Discretion is not a service. It is the starting point. Confidentiality agreements are welcomed, and the same care extends to every guest in attendance. Many families choose never to publish, and that choice is honored without exception.
A few photographs, in place of many.
From the California Riviera to wherever the invitation leads.
The studio keeps to the coast the estate builders of Montecito called the American Riviera, and to the sandstone coves below Laguna: tiled loggias, eucalyptus shade, the low sun that holds the marine layer offshore until the vows. It is a good place to learn restraint. Most commissions, though, begin with an itinerary.
Made to be inherited.
Each commission concludes as a made object: prints on archival cotton rag, albums bound by hand, and a family archive of every photograph, maintained for decades. These are pictures your grandchildren will take down from the shelf.
The families Paul Von Rieter photographs tend to return: for christenings, anniversaries, portraits at the house. A wedding is rarely the last commission. It is usually the first.
The Archive & Albums
Much of this work is never published. The families prefer it that way, and so does the studio.
Where families permit, the work has appeared in Rangefinder and Style Me Pretty. Rangefinder put it simply: what Paul Von Rieter wants to capture are the deeper elements.
A documentarian, in the family tradition.
Paul Von Rieter came to photography through a single grounding moment: a camera, his son, and the understanding that memory carries responsibility. Before photography belonged to feeds, it belonged to families, and his work returns to that tradition: pictures made for the drawing room wall and the album on the library shelf.
His practice lives almost entirely within celebrations of scale and intention: multi day gatherings, thoughtfully produced events, rooms where nothing can feel accidental and nothing should feel managed. The calendar is kept deliberately small so that every commission receives his full attention.
Paul serves as a global ambassador for Fujifilm and is regularly invited to speak and educate within the industry. He mentors a small number of photographers each year.
Begin a correspondence.
Paul Von Rieter accepts a limited number of commissions each year, in order to give each family his complete attention. Whether plans are settled or just beginning, and whether the inquiry comes from the couple, the family, or their planner, the first conversation is simply that: a conversation.