Boudoir Photography in Detroit: A Guide to Your Session (and Making a Weekend of It)

Boudoir Photography in Detroit: Your Guide to Booking a Session and Making a Weekend of It

So you’ve been thinking about booking a boudoir session in Detroit, and you’ve been doing the research thing. Reading articles. Looking at pricing. Comparing photographers. Trying to figure out if this is the moment.

If you’ve made it to this page, I’m guessing you’re close. Let me give you something a little more useful than another generic “what to expect” article. This is what it actually looks like to book a session in Detroit, paired with a weekend itinerary so you can turn your shoot day into something that feels like a whole thing instead of just an appointment.

Because here’s the truth: when you fly into Detroit for a session, or drive down from up north, or take the day off if you’re local, the trip is part of the experience. The session itself is two to three hours. The rest of the day is yours. Most women don’t think about that part until they’re standing on the studio steps wondering what to do next.

What boudoir photography in Detroit actually looks like

The Detroit boudoir scene has changed a lot in the last five years. There are more photographers, more studio spaces, and more variety in what’s being offered. The clients booking sessions today aren’t who they were even three years ago. Boudoir used to skew heavily bridal. Now it’s mostly women booking for themselves, on their own terms, for reasons that range from “I just turned 40” to “I’m finally out of a marriage that wasn’t right” to “I had three kids and I haven’t taken a real photo of myself in years.”

My studio is in Ferndale, just north of Detroit proper. The shoot itself is a private, full-service experience: I do hair and makeup myself before we start, you get unlimited outfit changes, and you see your images the same day. Sessions usually run two to three hours from arrival to wrap. You can read more about how the day actually flows on the boudoir experience page.

Most clients drive in from somewhere between thirty minutes and two hours away. Some fly in from out of state. A few stay in town for the whole weekend.

My shoot days are Mondays, Tuesdays, and Fridays. This guide is built around a Friday session, but the structure flips easily for a Monday or Tuesday shoot. Just shift the arrival night and recovery days accordingly.

This guide is for the women coming in from out of town who want to make a weekend of it, and for the locals who want to treat their session like an event instead of an errand.

Thursday — The arrival and the wind-down

If you’re coming in from out of town, Thursday is for landing softly. You don’t want to roll in Friday morning feeling any type of way other than excited. Get here the night before.

Where to stay

There are several downtown Detroit hotel options I’d actually send a client to:

The Shinola Hotel on Woodward. Detroit-made, beautifully designed, walkable to almost everything you’d want to do downtown. This is the one I’d pick if you want the full Detroit-as-a-destination experience.

Detroit Foundation Hotel on Larned Street. Inside a restored 1920s firehouse, with the Apparatus Room restaurant on the ground floor. Quiet, historical, the kind of hotel that feels like staying inside a piece of the city.

ROOST Detroit inside the Book Tower. These are apartment-style suites, which means a kitchen, a living room, and way more space than a normal hotel room. If you’re traveling with someone or staying for more than one night, this is the move.

The Siren Hotel on Broadway downtown. A boutique hotel inside the restored Wurlitzer Building, with one of the prettiest lobbies in the city, multiple bars on-site, and rooms that feel like staying inside a piece of old-Detroit elegance. Slightly smaller rooms than the Foundation or Shinola, but the design and atmosphere are unmatched if you want a boutique experience instead of a chain feel.

All four are within walking distance of dinner, drinks, and most of what you’d want to do on a Thursday evening downtown.

Thursday dinner

A few specific dinner options to know about, depending on the mood you’re in.

Baobab Fare on Woodward in the New Center neighborhood. East African food, owned by Hamissi Mamba and Nadia Nijimbere, a husband-and-wife team who came to Detroit as refugees and built one of the most genuinely loved restaurants in the city. The food is incredible. The space is warm. The kind of dinner that doesn’t feel like dinner so much as an experience.

SavannahBlue downtown, for elevated Southern food in a moody, candlelit space. Good for a quieter Thursday evening when you want something a little more dressed up.

For something more elevated, Grey Ghost Detroit on Watson Street in Brush Park. This is one of my personal favorites. Their tasting menu is incredible, the cocktails are some of the best in the city, and the space has the kind of dim, intentional energy that makes a meal feel like an event. Worth a reservation.

If you want full-on boujee, Prime + Proper on Griswold downtown. Detroit’s most serious steakhouse. Dry-aged steaks, a chicken-fried lobster appetizer that people drive in for, and an atmosphere that earns the price tag. This is the dinner you book when you want the night to feel like a celebration before the session even happens.

If a steakhouse isn’t your speed and you want something more casual, two spots to know about:

Detroit Shipping Company on Peterboro in Midtown. A food hall built inside actual shipping containers, with multiple vendors under one roof. Thai, sushi, burgers, dumplings, halal, tacos, the works. There’s an outdoor patio in summer and a full bar. Good for when you want options, low pressure, and the choice to graze. And there’s usually always music, sometimes a DJ so the vibe is fun!

Ima Izakaya on Michigan Ave in Corktown for ramen, dumplings, robata grill, and a really solid happy hour. There’s also Ima Noodles on Cass Ave in Midtown if you prefer the original location, which has more of a noodle-shop feel. Either works. Both are great.

The “treat yourself” pre-session option

If your session is Friday and you want to walk in feeling deeply held, book a Thursday afternoon or evening wellness appointment. There’s a wide range of options in Detroit depending on what kind of energy you’re looking for.

For ceremonial, herbal, and intentional wellness

Herbs and Words Immersive Healing Spa in Lathrup Village. Owned by Taj, a healer who offers yoni steams, foot soaks, and herbal-based wellness in a space designed to actually feel like a sanctuary. Black-owned, woman-owned, and the kind of place that women fly in for.

The Sacred Lounge Spa in Southfield. Similar focus on womb wellness and herbal care. A different aesthetic, similarly intentional.

For luxury day spa experiences

Woodhouse Spa on Woodward downtown. The full Detroit day spa experience with massage, facials, body treatments, and a quiet underground spa floor. Walking distance from most of the downtown hotels I recommend.

SOAK Spa at The Detroit Club on Cass Avenue. Inside the historic Detroit Club, with a saltwater grotto hot tub that other Detroit spas don’t have. Solid massage and facial offerings in a beautifully restored space.

IMMERSE Spa at MGM Grand Detroit. If you’re staying downtown and want full hotel-spa amenities including a pool, hot tub, and steam room access alongside your treatment, this is the option. Pricier, but a destination experience.

For massage and bodywork

Meta Physica Wellness Center in Corktown on Trumbull. Massage therapy, infrared sauna, and a genuinely well-loved local spot. The therapists here come up by name in reviews. Less polished than the downtown spas, more intentional than the chain ones.

Breathe Bodywork and Beautification on Hilton Road in Ferndale. Literally next door to my studio. Massage, lymphatic drainage, facials with sound bath integration, cupping. The kind of independent women-owned space where you can tell every detail was chosen on purpose.

Celestial Touch Wellness Studio on Nine Mile in downtown Ferndale. Owned by Ajay, who does integrative bodywork with prenatal massage, sound healing, and treatment plans for chronic issues. Small, quiet, deeply personal.

For hot yoga or movement before your session

Citizen Yoga Detroit on Library Street downtown. A bright, well-loved Detroit studio with morning classes that work for travelers. Vinyasa, restorative, and beginner-friendly options.

Midtown Yoga Wellness Center on Canfield in Midtown. Hot yoga in a high-ceilinged converted industrial space. The kind of class that wrings out everything you’re holding before the session day.

The Trap Yoga & Massage Studio on Franklin Street. Black-owned, women-owned, with yoga and massage offerings under one roof. A genuinely Detroit experience, and Jamal’s massages are referenced specifically in client reviews.

Full Lotus Yoga on Woodward in New Center. Vinyasa, yin, and candlelight classes in a beautiful fourth-floor space with great natural light. Smaller classes, very thoughtful teachers.

Friday — Session day

The session itself is its own thing and I’m not going to overexplain it here. You can read about how the day flows in detail, or read real client stories from women who’ve sat in this exact studio. What I’ll say is this: by the time you leave, you’ll have done the hardest part of whatever you came to Detroit for. The rest of the weekend is celebration.

Friday lunch or early dinner after your session

Depending on what time we wrap, you’ll be hungry. You’ll also probably want to sit somewhere that lets you decompress without being loud or rushed. Two suggestions.

The Congregation in Detroit’s North End. A coffee shop and cafe inside a converted church. Beautiful, quiet, perfect for the post-session float. Black-owned and one of the most-loved coffee spots in the city.

Yumvillage on Woodward, Caribbean and Pan-African food from chef Godwin Ihentuge. The jerk chicken and jollof rice are what to order. The space is bright and warm.

And one of my FAVORITES – Fork in Nigeria – Get the Chicken Fufu and Egusi. Delicious.

Friday night

You finished your session, you ate, you have the rest of the night. Now it’s time to celebrate.

Fixins Soul Kitchen downtown on Randolph Street. Owned by Kevin Johnson, this is the dinner you go to when you want fried chicken, collard greens, mac and cheese, and a lavender lemon drop to wash it all down. Black-owned, joyful, the kind of meal that makes you laugh out loud.

The Block on Woodward, a Black-owned restaurant and bar that does brunch, dinner, and craft cocktails in a low-lit, beautifully designed space. Good for a date night with yourself or a friend.

For a drink after

The lobby bars at the Shinola Hotel and Detroit Foundation Hotel both work for a quiet nightcap if you don’t feel like venturing out again. The Foundation’s Apparatus Room is the better-known of the two.

Saturday — The slow day

Saturday is for not rushing. Sleep in if you want. If you do get up and out, here’s how to spend the day.

Saturday brunch

Joe Louis Southern Kitchen opens at 8am Saturday for the kind of full Southern breakfast you actually want after a session the day before. Chicken and waffles, grits, the works. Named for Detroit’s heavyweight champion and serves the food that lives up to it.

The Congregation for a slower version. The coffee shop in a converted church handles a quiet morning well if you don’t want a big sit-down meal.

Saturday afternoon shopping

After brunch, head north on Woodward into Ferndale. Three boutiques worth the stop, all walkable to each other.

Not Sorry Goods at 22963 Woodward Avenue in Ferndale. Upcycled clothing, handmade pieces, and a non-binary, female-empowerment-focused vibe. Owned by Jess and Dy-Min.

The Rust Belt Market at 22801 Woodward in Ferndale. A multi-vendor market with handmade goods, art, jewelry, and clothing from dozens of small Michigan makers. Includes the Brave Wimp Society shop, which is a woman-owned candle, sticker, and gift line you’ll want to know about.

Boho Luxe Detroit on Woodward Heights in Ferndale. A gift shop with handmade earrings, soaps, candles, and body care owned by Jessica. Black-owned, woman-owned, and the kind of place that makes you slow down once you walk in.

If you want a clothing-specific stop with more of a boutique feel, drive down to Teasers Boutique on Livernois in Detroit’s Avenue of Fashion. Black-owned, women-owned, and known for unique pieces you won’t find at the mall.

Saturday night

You’ve got a full second night to enjoy the city. If you didn’t make it to one of the Friday dinner spots, this is your chance.

If you want something quieter, the lobby bars at the Shinola Hotel or Detroit Foundation Hotel handle a slow Saturday well. The Foundation’s Apparatus Room is the better-known of the two.

Sunday — The slow morning before you head home

Sunday is for taking your time. Stay in bed late if you want. If you do get up and out, here are the spots that handle a slow Sunday morning well.

Joe Louis Southern Kitchen opens at 8am Sunday for the kind of full Southern breakfast that handles a weekend in Detroit well.

The Congregation earns its Sunday energy too. Exactly the right tempo for someone who just did something brave two days ago and is taking the weekend to land back in herself.

If you have an extra hour before you head home and you want one more piece of the city, drive past the Heidelberg Project on the east side. A community art installation that’s been running since the 80s, started by Tyree Guyton. It’s free, it’s outdoors, and it’s one of the most distinctly Detroit things you can do in twenty minutes.

Why Detroit, specifically

I’m a Michigan photographer through and through, and Detroit is the city my work lives inside. Detroit has a creative and entrepreneurial spirit that’s different from any other Midwestern city right now. The businesses I just listed are owned by people who built them from the ground up, often by women and people of color who decided this city was worth building inside of. That energy lives in the studio. It lives in how my sessions feel, and it’s part of why women travel here for boudoir when they could book closer to home.

If you’re thinking about booking a session and you’re trying to decide whether to come to Detroit or stay local, the answer probably depends on what you want the session to mean. If you want it to be a thing on the calendar, your local photographer is fine. If you want it to be a moment, a weekend you remember, an experience you tell your friends about, a turning point, that’s worth the trip.

How to book

If you’ve read this far and something is pulling at you, the next step is simple.

Start the booking process here or read real client stories from women who’ve done what you’re thinking about doing.

The session is $750 to book, and full album collections run from $3,200 to $6,500. Payment plans start as low as $125/month, because money shouldn’t be the reason you don’t do this.

If you’re looking for something smaller, check out my pricing page for details on the Intro Collection starting at $1500.

If you’re flying in or driving down, give yourself the weekend. You won’t regret it.