Creative Engagement Photo Ideas for Couples Who Swear They’re Not Physical Touch People
Every one of my engagement sessions starts with some casual research and development.
You tell me your love language. How you met. The moment you knew. (You know, standard, heartwarming, very-on-brand-for-two-people-very-much-in-love stuff.)
In some cases, you’ll preemptively warn me that you’re ‘not PDA people’ or that you’re worried you won’t know what to do with your hands. Which… fair. We love some good, old-fashioned self-awareness.
But then, within seconds of the camera being out, you two lovebirds will go and prove yourself wrong. And there is nothing— I repeat for dramatic emphasis, nothing— that exposes you quite like your own engagement photos.
Case in point? Lindsey and Eric.
When Your Body Tells on You: Lindsey & Eric Edition
Lindsey and Eric didn’t claim physical touch as their love language in their OG questionnaire. Not even as a runner-up. In fact, they both seemed pretty convinced that wasn’t their lane.
(Feel free to be as surprised as I was.)
Because when we met up— no expectations beyond ‘let’s hang out and see what pure cinema happens’— it took all of thirty seconds before I was internally like… wait. Are we sure you’re not physical touch people?
Eric’s hand kept finding Lindsey’s waist like it had a homing device. Lindsey’s nose, forehead, shoulder—pick one—kept drifting back toward him like that was simply where she felt most at ease. They’d pull apart for half a beat, then reattach because they couldn’t seem to help it. (Love that for them.)
It wasn’t theatrical, ‘look at us, could we be any cuter?!’ PDA, either. It was just… constant. Electric, really. Kind of, sort of broke my brain a little bit, while we’re all outing ourselves here.
Turns out you don’t actually get to vote on your love language. You can fill out the questionnaire however you want, but your body will give you away.





Why Physical Touch Is a Cheat Code for Engagement Photos
Physical touch is the superior love language for cinematic engagement photos. I said it. You can argue with me later.
Not because it’s shower or sexier, either. It’s just most visible. It’s honestly all of the engagement photo inspiration a girl really needs.
When physical touch is present, the camera isn’t inventing intimacy— it’s documenting it. The best engagement photo ideas simply capitalize on what’s already happening.
Minimal effort, maximum payoff. A personal favorite.
Engagement Photo Idea #1: Put Yourself Somewhere PDA Feels Normal
Bars are wildly underrated engagement session locations, but really, anywhere that forces you (not like you’re mad about it) up close and personal will do the trick. The magic isn’t in the bar itself. It’s in the proximity.
Crowded patios. Narrow sidewalks. Corner booths. Stairs that only fit one of you at a time.
Basically anywhere that standing six feet apart would actually be weirder than low-key sitting on each other.
Your hands suddenly have jobs. Holding a glass. Resting on the bar. Slipping into a back pocket. Finding a waist. Grabbing a face because, frankly, it’s right there and you know you want to, anyway.
Leaning in stops feeling performative and starts feeling necessary.
For Lindsey and Eric, the bar setting just happened to be the perfect wingman. Sitting shoulder-to-shoulder because that’s how the stools were set up. Standing hip-to-hip because there wasn’t really another option. Sharing drinks, sharing space, not once trying to fight the magnetic pull.
If physical touch only shows up for the two of you when you’re relaxed or distracted, here’s one of the best engagement photo ideas I have up my sleeve: Choose a location that encourages closeness. Let the setting be the instigator, and let your body take it from there.








Engagement Photo Idea #2: Get Cozy Enough to Forget About the Third Wheel With A Camera
Ashley and Aiden said, “Hard pass,” to leaving the house, and honestly, never have I ever respected something more.
Their engagement session happened in their own home. As in: sweats on, socks bunched up around their ankles, and not a single person pretending this was anything other than a normal day they just happened to be photographed in.
At one point, Ashley even straight-up ditched her pants. Not in a scandalous way, but in a this is my house and I live here way. Iconic behavior, if you ask me.
They flopped onto the couch like two people who absolutely do this every night after work. Legs tangled because that’s how gravity works. Heads resting wherever they landed because there’s nothing like a good safe space.
Touch showed up in the most unceremonious ways—leaning, grounding, scooting closer without checking first or making it a thing.
Which, coincidentally, is when the photos really slap.
If you feel most connected in your own space—pants optional, shoes debateable—don’t fight that. Familiar places have a way of letting real intimacy take the wheel.
Turns out, being yourselves is still the hottest of the engagement photo ideas on the table.









Engagement Photo Idea #3: Let Repetition Be the Story
Go ahead, ask what’s on everybody’s mind: “Wait… won’t the photos all kind of look the same if all we’re doing is touching?”
And sure. If by “the same” you mean accurate, then yes. Guilty as charged.
With Delaney and Mark, the same things kept happening no matter what I prompted. Mark’s hand kept reaching for hers. Delaney kept instinctively leaning back into him like that’s where she resets. Space kept closing… which is exactly how I like it.
Repetition isn’t a flaw in storytelling. It’s the proof, the habit, the muscle memory of a relationship doing what it does best.
I’m not interested in interrupting a moment just to prove we can create a different one. If something keeps happening in real life, I want it happening in your photos, too.
You should be able to look at your engagement photos and think, yeah… that tracks.
That’s when you know we got it right.








The Moral of the Story
If you think you’re not physical touch people, but one of you is always leaning, reaching, grounding, or reconnecting without thinking—congrats. You definitely are, even if just a little bit.
Contrary to popular belief, you don’t actually need more engagement photo ideas. You don’t need more concepts, more variety, or me telling you to do something you’d literally never do on a normal Tuesday.
The best engagement photos aren’t the ones where you tried something new just to prove that you could. They’re the ones where you stop interrupting what already happens in your relationship and start telling the story.
The ones that feel familiar the second you see them. The ones that make you laugh because, oh wow, that’s so us. The ones you’ll come back to years from now and recognize the habits you still have, even after all this time.
That’s the bar.
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