The thing nobody tells you about boudoir wardrobe
Most of the content you'll find about what to wear to a boudoir shoot is either a sponsored product roundup or generic advice that ignores how light actually works. So here's what matters: what you wear is less important than almost everything else.
The light matters more. The poses matter more. Your comfort in the room matters more. The right outfit on the wrong day doesn't save the session. The right energy in a plain black set absolutely does.
That said — some things photograph better than others. Here's what to know.
How many looks to bring
More than you think you'll need. Pack options and let the shoot determine what actually gets used. For a 2-hour session: bring 3 to 4 looks minimum. For a 3-hour session: 4 to 6.
Something you already own and feel good in. The first look should be low-stakes — it's the warmup.
The one you bought for this, or the one you've been keeping for a reason. This is the centrepiece.
The bolder piece, the more revealing option, the one that felt like too much at the store. Bring it.
Bare skin with a sheet, just underwear, a bodysuit. Sometimes the simplest look is the strongest.
What actually photographs well
Photographs well
Lace — especially darker lace against lighter skin or lighter lace against darker skin. The texture reads well.
Solid colours: black, deep red, champagne, forest green. Clear and editorial.
Bodysuits. The single-piece line is clean and flattering in almost every pose.
Robes — open, at the shoulder, half-on. Transitional and versatile.
Oversized shirts, men's dress shirts, blazers. Conceptual looks always have impact.
Harder to work with
Thin straps that catch light awkwardly and create shadows in unflattering places.
Loud prints — florals, busy patterns, novelty graphics. They pull attention away from you.
Anything that pulls marks into your skin after 20 minutes. Tight waistbands, underwire that digs in.
Brand-new pieces you haven't tried on — don't find out they don't fit on shoot day.
On fit
Fit matters more than size. Lingerie that fits you well will always photograph better than a smaller size you've squeezed into or a larger size that bags. Marks from clothing that was too tight take 20-30 minutes to fade — keep this in mind when you change looks.
If you're unsure about a piece, put it on, move around in it, and check how it looks from behind. If it's comfortable standing still but uncomfortable moving, leave it at home.
The body you're in right now. Not the one you're planning on having. Book the shoot.
What to wear on your face
More than your everyday look. Full glam if that's what you want — strong eyes, bold lip, both at once. Stripped back to almost nothing. Either works. It's your shoot. Do it the way you actually want to look, not the way you think you should.
If you're doing your own makeup: use products with more staying power than usual. Heat from studio lighting and the physical activity of moving around a session will break down lighter products faster than you'd expect. Setting spray matters.
Hair: whatever makes you feel like yourself. Loose waves, a slicked-back updo, a full blowout — all of it photographs well. If you're unsure, bring options. You can change it between looks.
What to wear when you arrive
Something easy to take off and put on. Anything that leaves marks — waistbands, socks, tight bra straps — remove before you arrive if possible, or at least 30 minutes before your first look. Marks fade but they take time you could be spending shooting.
Nails: fresh if possible. They're in more shots than you think.
What not to stress about
- Not having "boudoir lingerie." You don't need it. What you already own is fine to start from.
- Cellulite, stretch marks, scars. They're in the photos and the photos look great anyway. That's not a consolation — it's what actually happens.
- Not knowing how to pose. That's the photographer's job. You just have to show up.
- Body hair. Your call, not a requirement either way.
- Weight, size, shape. None of it is a prerequisite. Not one body type books boudoir and another doesn't.
The one thing that matters more than everything on this list
Showing up. Deciding to do it and following through. Every single thing that felt like it needed to be resolved before you could book — the body thing, the timing thing, the finding-the-right-set thing — turns out to not be what the photos are about.
The photos are about you showing up for yourself. Everything else is just detail.
Questions?
Just book.
We'll figure out the rest together. Packages from $420 · Vancouver · Discreet by default.
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