From pre-engagement and engagement shoots before the wedding to trash-the-dress shoots after, when it comes to a couple’s big day, every moment can be (and usually is) obsessively documented – and that doesn’t even include the 1000 or so shots snapped on the wedding day itself.<\/p>\n
So, it was only a matter of time before the cameras were allowed into the after-party, the couple’s wedding night or, more correctly, the morning after the wedding night.<\/p>\n
Yep. On top of all the things that go on before and during the wedding, more and more couples are opting to capture the intimacy of their first night as a married couple too – and the cameras are more than welcome.<\/p>\n
While most of the photos we’ve seen are tasteful and cute even, others are hardly the conventional type of shot you’d expect to be hanging on a couple’s lounge room wall, let alone shown to the kids or grand kids. Of course, that depends on the couple’s personality and how much they wish to share.<\/p>\n
But it is a great idea, a novel twist on the art of wedding photography that has changed so much over the past decade.<\/p>\n
New Jersey-based photographer Michelle Jonn\u00e9 told The New York Daily News<\/a> that her images (above) were inspired by the lusty range of Emporio Armani ads featuring David Beckham and wife, Victoria.<\/p>\n