What's in This Post
ToggleSome proposals are spontaneous. A feeling hits, a ring appears, and everything unfolds in the moment. And those are beautiful in their own way.
But then there are proposals like Brad and Aysha’s — the kind where someone has been quietly thinking, planning, and caring for weeks. Where every detail has been considered. Where the people who love the couple most are crouched behind a hill, trying not to cry too loudly before the moment even starts.
This was one of those proposals. And photographing it was one of the most joyful experiences I’ve had on the job.

If you’re searching for the right location for a waterfront proposal in the Seattle area, Edmonds deserves serious consideration. It has a quality that’s hard to find closer to the city — a small-town waterfront feel with genuinely dramatic views of Puget Sound and the Olympic Mountains beyond.
The ferry dock, the beach, the low seawall with water stretching out in every direction — it’s a place that feels significant without being overwhelming. It’s intimate enough to feel personal, but open and beautiful enough to take your breath away. And unlike some of the more well-known Seattle-area proposal spots, Edmonds still has a quieter, less-trafficked energy that makes surprise proposals genuinely workable.
For Brad, the choice of location wasn’t random. He chose the Edmonds waterfront because it meant something — and then he went about making sure every detail of the moment reflected that intentionality.
Brad didn’t just pick a spot and show up. He came to the Edmonds waterfront ahead of time, mapped out the exact location he envisioned, and took reference photos — the kind of detailed scouting you don’t often see from a proposer, but that makes a real difference when the moment comes.
He shared those reference photos with both families. His and Aysha’s. He walked them through his vision so that when they arrived to set up, there was no guesswork. Everyone knew exactly where things should go, what the frame would look like, what they were building together.
And then — this detail is one of my favorites — he brought a small rug to kneel on so he wouldn’t get his pants dirty.
I know that sounds like a small thing. But I think it says everything about who Brad is as a partner. He was thinking ahead. He was being practical and prepared in the quietest, most caring way. He wasn’t just focused on the grand gesture; he was thinking about the thousand small things that would make the moment work. That kind of attentiveness doesn’t stop at proposal planning — and Aysha is going to have it for the rest of her life.

Both families arrived at the waterfront well before Brad and Aysha. That’s always one of my favorite parts of a family-involved proposal — the energy of everyone gathered together, working toward this shared secret, trying to keep it together emotionally before anything has even happened yet.
They got to work immediately. Flowers were placed, candles arranged, and piece by piece, a heart-shaped arch took shape overlooking the water. It was the kind of setup that transforms a beautiful location into something truly romantic and intentional — not just a pretty backdrop, but a space built for this exact moment.
Once everything was in place, all of it — both families, the joy, the barely-contained tears — climbed up a nearby hill and tucked themselves out of sight. Waiting. Watching from a distance. Trying very hard to stay quiet.
As an Edmonds proposal photographer, this is one of the most delightful challenges of the job: everyone needs to be hidden but close enough to come running the second they hear a yes. The logistics require real coordination. This group absolutely nailed it.
It had been raining all morning. Not dramatically — just that soft, steady Pacific Northwest rain that settles in and makes you wonder if it’s ever going to lift. Not ideal conditions for this outdoor Edmonds waterfront proposal, and I know Brad had been watching the forecast closely.
Then, right before they arrived, it stopped.
The clouds stayed — they didn’t part for some big cinematic sun moment — but the rain was gone. What it left behind was something actually better for photography than a clear midday sky: soft, even, diffused light. No harsh shadows. No squinting. Just a beautiful, flattering overcast that made everything glow quietly.
It was one of those moments where the weather felt like it was in on the plan. The Pacific Northwest has a way of doing that sometimes — of being dramatic right up until the moment something important is about to happen, and then settling into something unexpectedly perfect.



Aysha was so caught up in the moment — in Brad, in the arch, in the waterfront view — that she didn’t notice me at first. That’s exactly what you want as a proposal photographer. You want to be invisible until you need to be, and you want the couple to be so present with each other that the camera is the last thing on anyone’s mind.
They spent time together in front of the arch. Laughing, taking it in, being in the moment. And then Brad got down on one knee.
Everything seemed to slow down — the way it always does at the actual moment of a proposal. The air, the movement, the time. It’s one of the genuinely magical things about photographing proposals: for a few seconds, it really does feel like the world pauses.
Aysha said yes.
And from the hill behind them, the cheers erupted.
The families came running — no longer trying to stay quiet, no longer holding it together. They ran down the hill toward the waterfront, waving and calling out, and when they reached Brad and Aysha, the whole scene became this beautiful, joyful, tearful collision of people who had been waiting all morning to let themselves feel it.
Hugs everywhere. Tears everywhere. Laughter that you could probably hear from the ferry dock.



















If Brad and Aysha’s story has you thinking about your own Edmonds waterfront proposal, here are a few things worth knowing:
Scout the location in advance. The Edmonds waterfront has several distinct spots with different vibes — the area near the ferry dock, the beach north of downtown, and the seawall areas with unobstructed water views. Visiting ahead of time (like Brad did) lets you find the exact frame you’re envisioning.
Overcast days are your friend. Pacific Northwest clouds produce some of the most flattering natural light for outdoor photography. Don’t let a grey forecast discourage you.
Coordinate family arrivals carefully. If you’re including family, build in more time than you think you need for setup and getting everyone hidden. Things always take a few minutes longer than planned.
Hire an Edmonds proposal photographer who knows the area. Familiarity with the location makes a real difference — knowing where to position, how to blend in, and how to capture the light at different times of day.
Think through the small details. Brad brought a rug to kneel on. That kind of practical intentionality — thinking through the moment from beginning to end — is what separates a good proposal from a truly memorable one.









I’ve photographed a lot of proposals. Intimate ones with just two people and a hidden photographer. Elaborate ones with florals and arches or candle-lit cabins. Simple ones at meaningful spots. Each type has its own beauty.
But there is something uniquely powerful about a proposal where family is involved — where the people who have watched this relationship grow from the beginning are standing right there, witnessing the moment it becomes something official.
It changes the energy of the whole thing. The proposal stops being just a private moment between two people and becomes something shared — a celebration that was already underway before the ring was presented, because everyone who loved them already knew they were meant to be together.
When Aysha turned and saw her family and Brad’s family running toward them, that wasn’t just a nice surprise detail. That was a message. We all did this together. We all knew. We’ve all been rooting for you.
As an Edmonds proposal photographer, I love documenting those moments most. Not just the question itself, but the full story around it — the planning, the people, the care that went into every detail before the couple even arrived.



What made this Edmonds waterfront proposal so beautiful wasn’t the arch, the candles, or even the clouds parting at exactly the right moment. It was the accumulation of all the care that went into it — the weeks of planning, the reference photos, the families hiding on the hill, the small rug tucked into a bag just in case.
It was a proposal that showed Aysha, before Brad even got down on one knee, that she is someone worth thinking about. Worth preparing for. Worth getting every detail right for.
She said yes. And every person on that hill who had been holding their breath finally got to breathe.
Looking for an Edmonds proposal photographer who can capture your moment naturally and beautifully? I’d love to help you plan it. Reach out here.
Lindsey is the Seattle wedding photographer for couples who want to remember how their day felt, not just how it looked. With 250+ weddings photographed, she's there to calm the chaos and catch the moments that matter most. Serving the U.S. and worldwide. Queer-owned and inclusive of all couples and identities.