Apr 14 2026 | By: Whitt Photography and Film
Cheyenne and Nathan originally had a very different plan.
A Fourth of July wedding at the Historic Hotel Roanoke. Classic, a little dramatic, and unintentionally sharing a wedding date with the one and only Taylor Swift (allegedly).
But at the beginning of the year, they found out they were expecting their baby girl, and everything shifted.
I still remember Cheyenne calling to tell me the news. She was excited, but also a little overwhelmed, trying to figure out what it meant for all the plans they had already made. And honestly, I get that. Big life changes have a way of making everything else feel uncertain for a minute.
But having three kids of our own, Matt and I have always seen babies for what they are. A blessing, every single time. So from the start, the goal was simple. Figure out how to make this day work for them, not the other way around.
They chose something that actually fit this season of life. A small, intentional wedding day with their pastor and a handful of family there to witness it.
They got married at the Mill Mountain Star in Roanoke during golden hour, which felt like a risk after a full day of rain. But right as their ceremony started, just enough light broke through the storm clouds to give them the kind of glow you can’t plan for.
If you’ve seen their engagement session at the Historic Hotel Roanoke, you know we leaned into a more editorial, old Hollywood feel. This day was the opposite in the best way. More relaxed, more present, more about what was actually happening than how it looked.
Elopements have a way of stripping everything back to what matters most. No packed timeline, no pressure, just space to actually be present. That kind of atmosphere is what creates photos that feel real instead of forced.
After everything, they made their exit in a red Mustang convertible, which felt like the perfect ending. A little bold, a little fun, and very them.
Days like this are always the ones that stick with me. Simple, intentional, and focused on what actually matters. Whether it’s an elopement in Roanoke or a small wedding close to home, the goal is always the same. Capturing it in a way that feels honest and true to what it actually was.
Cheyenne and Nathan’s wedding didn’t look anything like the original plan, but it reflected exactly where they are right now. Stepping into marriage while getting ready to meet their daughter.
No big production, no packed timeline, no need to overcomplicate it.
Just the two of them, committing to forever, and driving off into the literal sunset.
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