About
From scrubs to brushes.
I spent years as an MRI technician. It was steady, detailed work, and I was good at it — but every morning I was setting an alarm to go do someone else's dream. Makeup had been mine since I was old enough to hold a brush.
In [YEAR] I finally stopped putting it off. I started taking bridal clients on weekends, then most weekends, then every weekend, and eventually I hung up the lead apron for good. Today I do this full-time, and I can't imagine doing anything else.
“I have one job on your wedding day, and it isn't to make you look like someone else. It's to make sure that when your partner sees you at the end of the aisle, they see you— the best, most photographable, most you version of you.”
Off the clock
When I'm not working, I'm with my husband Yanni and our son Spiro — [placeholder: specific charming details about family life]. If you book me, this is who you're getting: a working mom from Boston who takes the craft seriously and doesn't take herself too seriously.
Why solo matters
A lot of bigger studios can't tell you exactly who will show up on your wedding day until a week before — sometimes the morning of. I can. It'll be me. I'll be the one you met at your trial, the one who knows your skin, the one who remembers that you mentioned your mom cries easily and you want makeup that can handle it.