By: Michelle Gunton Photography
If you've been dreaming about a Seven Paths Manor engagement session in Spring Hope, NC — Hunter and Dylan's fall session is exactly what you need to see right now, because it captures everything that makes this venue so special for engagement photography and I honestly couldn't have planned it more perfectly if I tried. I'm Michelle Gunton, a North Carolina engagement and wedding photographer based in Wake Forest — and Seven Paths Manor is one of my absolute favorite places to photograph couples in the entire Triangle area. The light here does something to people. The property does something to people. And what comes out of a golden hour session in these fields is the kind of imagery that makes you forget you're even looking at photos. Before you keep reading, take a look at the Seven Paths Manor wedding photographer hub page to see full galleries from this venue — engagement sessions and complete wedding days both.
Fall engagement sessions in North Carolina have a magic all their own — and Hunter and Dylan's session at Seven Paths Manor reminded me exactly why I fell in love with photographing at this venue in the first place.
The trees were just starting to turn. That particular shade of warm, early-autumn gold that North Carolina does better than almost anywhere. The air had finally dropped to that perfect temperature where you can actually be outside without melting, and the evening light was doing that thing it does in September and October where it just seems to glow from everywhere at once.
Hunter and Dylan showed up relaxed, genuinely excited, and completely themselves — which is honestly all a photographer ever needs from a couple to make magic happen.
Some engagement sessions take a while to find their rhythm. Couples arrive a little stiff, a little self-conscious, and you spend the first twenty minutes just helping them remember that they actually like each other.
Hunter and Dylan were not that couple.
From the moment we started, there was this easy, natural energy between them — the kind that you can't manufacture and can't fake. They laughed at each other's jokes. They held hands without being told to. They looked at each other the way you want every couple to look at each other when nobody's watching.
My job was mostly just to keep up with them.
One of the things I loved most about planning this session with Hunter and Dylan was their decision to do two completely different outfit looks — and the contrast between them is one of my favorite things about this gallery.
They started in casual outfits. Relaxed fits, comfortable shoes, the kind of clothes you actually wear when you're just happy to be with your person on a beautiful evening. And those images? They're some of the warmest, most genuine photos in the entire session. When people are physically comfortable, they stop thinking about how they look — and that's when you get the real stuff.
The laughter. The inside jokes. The way he looks at her when she says something that cracks him up.
That's what the casual look gave us. And it set the tone for the rest of the evening.
After the casual look, Hunter and Dylan changed into more elevated, dressy attire — and the transformation was beautiful.
Seven Paths Manor has an elegance to it that rises to meet a dressed-up couple. The architecture, the manicured grounds, the way the property carries itself — it all pairs naturally with something more polished. Their dressy portraits have a timeless, almost editorial quality that's completely different in feel from the casual images but equally stunning in their own way.
Having both looks gave them a gallery that tells a full, layered story — the comfortable, everyday version of their relationship and the elevated, beautiful version of who they are when they show up for each other.
Both versions are completely real. Both versions are completely them.
I talk about golden hour a lot. I know. But stay with me — because at Seven Paths Manor, it genuinely deserves every word.
As the sun started dropping toward the tree line that evening, the property went through this transformation. The fields turned warm and amber. The shadows went long and soft. The air itself seemed to change quality — like everything got quieter and more beautiful all at once.
Hunter and Dylan walked out into the open fields and I followed them with my camera and I remember thinking: this is why I do this.
Those golden hour portraits — the ones where they're walking hand in hand through the field with the whole warm evening behind them — are the images that stop people mid-scroll. The ones their friends screenshot and text to their partners. The ones that will be in frames on their wall for the next thirty years.
Golden hour at Seven Paths Manor typically runs from about 45 minutes before sunset until about 10 minutes after. That window is short, and it is everything.
Planning your engagement session to hit that light is the single most impactful decision you can make for your gallery. I schedule every session here with that window as the anchor point and build everything else around it — outfit changes, location rotations, the whole flow of the evening.
When you plan around the light instead of fitting the light in where it's convenient, the difference in your photos is not subtle. It's transformational.
One of the biggest photography advantages at Seven Paths Manor is how much variety exists within a single property. You're not driving between locations or trying to coordinate a timeline around traffic. Everything you need is right here:
That variety is what gives your gallery depth and dimension — multiple moods, multiple aesthetics, one cohesive story.
Seven Paths Manor has a quality that I don't fully have words for. It's something about the combination of privacy and space and natural beauty — but when couples arrive here, they exhale. The tension in their shoulders drops. They stop worrying about whether they look okay and start just being present with each other.
That shift is everything for engagement photography.
Relaxed couples make for genuine photos. Genuine photos make for galleries that feel real. And galleries that feel real are the ones you'll still love looking at twenty years from now.
Seven Paths Manor sits about 45–50 minutes east of Raleigh in Spring Hope, NC — far enough to feel like you've truly gotten away from the city, close enough that it's not a production to get there. For couples based in Wake Forest, Louisburg, or the northeastern Triangle, it's even closer.
The drive through Eastern NC countryside is honestly part of the experience. By the time you pull up the driveway, you're already in a completely different headspace than you were in Raleigh traffic an hour ago.
That's a good place to start an engagement session.
Every session I photograph at Seven Paths Manor follows a similar rhythm — and that rhythm is intentional.
We typically start in your first outfit look with a location that has great light earlier in the evening. This gives you time to warm up, get comfortable, and shake off any nerves before we move into the most photogenic part of the evening. As the light starts shifting toward golden hour, we transition to the open fields for your most dramatic, sweeping portraits. We'll do your second outfit change either before or after this depending on your timeline. By the time the sun actually sets, we've covered multiple locations, two looks, and you've completely forgotten you're being photographed.
That's the goal. Every time.
A few things that make Seven Paths Manor engagement sessions run smoothly:
If you're getting married at Seven Paths Manor — absolutely yes.
Doing your engagement session at your wedding venue is one of the smartest photography investments you can make. You arrive on your wedding day already comfortable in front of my camera. You already know the property. You already know your favorite portrait spots. And your engagement gallery and wedding gallery end up feeling like a cohesive, connected visual story of your relationship.
It also gives me the chance to scout the property with your specific faces and your specific light in mind — which makes your wedding day portraits even stronger.
For everything you need to know about Seven Paths Manor as a wedding venue, read the Seven Paths Manor wedding venue guide. And to see what a full wedding day looks like at this property, the Seven Paths Manor wedding photos gallery shows it all from start to finish.
→ View Seven Paths Manor Wedding Photos
→ See the Full Seven Paths Manor Gallery
Short answer: Most sessions run 1.5–2 hours, which is enough time for two outfit looks and golden hour portraits.
The sweet spot for an engagement session at Seven Paths Manor is arriving about 90 minutes before sunset. That gives you time to ease into the session with your first look, explore a few different locations on the property, change into your second outfit, and still have that full golden hour window for the most dramatic portraits. Rushing an engagement session is the fastest way to lose the relaxed energy that makes the photos special — so I always build in more time than we think we need.
Short answer: Two looks — one casual and comfortable, one elevated and dressy. Avoid busy patterns and matching outfits.
Think about how you actually dress when you're together. Your casual look should feel like you on a nice weekend — relaxed but put together. Your dressy look can be as elevated as you want — a flowy dress, a blazer, something that feels special but not costume-y. The most important thing is that you feel like yourselves in both outfits. Uncomfortable clothes make for uncomfortable photos.
Colors that photograph beautifully at Seven Paths Manor: warm neutrals, earthy tones, soft whites, deep jewel tones in the fall. Avoid: bright neons, busy patterns, matching outfits that look coordinated rather than connected.
Short answer: Yes — and each season brings something completely different.
Fall is the most popular season for engagement sessions at Seven Paths Manor, and for obvious reasons — the golden light, the warm tones, the perfect temperatures. But spring brings fresh blooms and lush greens that are equally stunning. Summer evenings have a dramatic, moody quality when the sky goes orange and pink. And winter sessions have an intimacy and quietness to them that's completely unique. Whatever season you're in, I can show you galleries from that time of year so you can see exactly what to expect.
Short answer: 2–3 months minimum for most dates. 4–6 months for fall Saturday sessions.
Fall Saturdays at Seven Paths Manor fill up fast — both for the venue itself and for engagement session photographers. If you have your heart set on a fall golden hour session here, reaching out early is genuinely important. For spring, summer, and winter sessions, 2–3 months of lead time is usually sufficient. If you're also booking a wedding with me, your engagement session is typically scheduled as part of that process.
Short answer: Yes — Seven Paths Manor is one of my regular session locations.
I'm based in Wake Forest, NC and Seven Paths Manor in Spring Hope is well within my regular travel range. I photograph sessions and weddings there regularly — it's about 45–50 minutes from Wake Forest and roughly the same from north Raleigh. No travel fees apply for sessions at this venue.
Here's what I know after years of photographing couples at this venue:
The engagement session you're imagining — golden light, wide open fields, the two of you completely at ease with each other while I capture something you'll want framed in your home forever — that session is absolutely possible here.
Seven Paths Manor makes it easy. The light is extraordinary. The property is stunning. And when you show up willing to laugh, willing to be present, and willing to trust the process — the photos take care of themselves.
Hunter and Dylan showed up exactly like that. And look what happened.
I would genuinely love to do the same for you.
→ Book Your Seven Paths Manor Engagement Session
→ See the Seven Paths Manor Wedding Hub + Full Galleries
→ Read the Seven Paths Manor Venue Guide
→ View Seven Paths Manor Wedding Photos
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