Grace Girl Beads, founded by Amy Boyle, is a special jewelry line stocked in over 300 retail locations, featured at local markets, and wholesaled through platforms like Faire. Each seasonal collection demands photography that showcases both the craftsmanship of the pieces and how they gracefully look on real people. For Amy, imagery isn’t just about product—it’s about story and connection.
Every season, we shoot both in person and in-studio. For the in-person sessions—this timehosted at Constitution Village in Downtown Huntsville—our goal is to answer, “What does the jewelry look like on a person?” In contrast, studio photography zooms in on detail: every clasp, bead, and texture. Together, these photo sets keep retail listings, website carousels, wholesale catalogs, and social pages cohesive and elevated.
My guiding principle is simple: anticipate what Amy will need for product listings, social updates, and print marketing. At Constitution Village, softly styled models show how the jewelry moves in context. In studio, close-up photography hones in on texture and finish without distraction. Both deliver rich content—whether for a website banner or social-media signup graphic, we’re building usable custom stock photography, not just listings.
The result is a cohesive, versatile image set that’s equal parts editorial and commercial. Each piece flows from polished studio detail to real-world context—working together in carousels on Grace Girl Beads’ site and Faire listings. For small business owners in jewelry, fashion, or crafts: combining in-person and studio product photography powers your brand story and keeps your visuals stylistically unified across platforms.
Here are some past sessions we’ve done with the Grace Girl Beads team:
Adding diversity into a Jewelry brand
Lifestyle Gulf Product Session
In-Studio Jewelry Product Session