Josephine and Miguel’s Beauty and the Beast wedding in Navarre blended fall color, family meaning, and storybook details into one intimate Gulf Coast celebration.
By Shawn Handrahan | 8nfinity Photography
Navarre wedding photographer coverage gets especially memorable when a wedding has a clear point of view, strong family meaning, and details that actually feel personal to the couple. Josephine and Miguel built exactly that kind of day.
Their October 3, 2024 celebration in Navarre, Florida brought Beauty and the Beast inspiration into a setting that still felt intimate, warm, and unmistakably theirs. Instead of leaning on theme for theme’s sake, they used it to shape the mood of the day: twinkle lights, rich fall color, romantic details, and a setting that felt both elegant and deeply personal.
Josephine and Miguel first knew each other in high school. Years later, life brought them back together, and the connection turned into something lasting. After four years together, Miguel proposed during a trip to Georgia in the coral room of an aquarium, giving their story the kind of cinematic beginning that fit them perfectly.
That same sense of intention carried into the wedding itself. Their guest list stayed intimate at around 70 people, which gave the whole celebration room to feel heartfelt instead of rushed. Every part of the day felt designed around the people who mattered most.
Josephine and Miguel chose a Beauty and the Beast inspired wedding design with fall colors, romantic lighting, and details that felt playful without losing sophistication. It was the kind of concept that can easily become too much, but they kept it grounded in real emotion and thoughtful design.
The wedding took place in Navarre at a family backyard setting offered by Josephine’s parents, Penny and Mark Vitale. That choice immediately changed the energy of the day. It didn’t feel generic or rented. It felt personal, meaningful, and full of history before the ceremony even began.
Josephine spent the morning with her bridesmaids Michell, Angelina, and Faryn, while Miguel got ready with Logan, Cameron, and Aiden. Their nieces, Caroline and Paisley, served as flower girls, and their nephew Bennett stepped in as ring bearer. Josephine’s relative Dominic Vitale officiated the ceremony, which made the vows feel even more rooted in family.
They also planned a first look before the ceremony, giving themselves space to slow down, connect, and take in the day before everything began moving at full speed. For couples planning a wedding with a lot of emotional weight, that kind of breathing room matters.
The celebration included the classic moments that matter most because they bring people into the story: a first dance, a father-daughter dance, a mother-son dance, speeches, cake cutting, and a champagne toast. Josephine and Miguel skipped the bouquet and garter toss, which kept the reception feeling intentional and focused on the parts of the night they cared about most.
They also planned a bubble exit to close the evening, which fit the storybook tone of the wedding without feeling overdone. Small choices like that are often what make a gallery feel cohesive later. They support the atmosphere instead of distracting from it.
The cake came from Publix, and Big Day Rentals helped bring the event setup to life. Those practical details mattered because they supported a wedding that was imaginative but still grounded. Nothing felt random. Everything worked together to support the mood Josephine and Miguel wanted their guests to feel.
What made this wedding stand out most was not just the theme. It was the way the theme, family involvement, and setting all worked together to tell one clear story. Josephine and Miguel created a celebration that felt romantic, playful, and deeply personal from beginning to end.
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