Outfit planning for a couples session on Navarre Beach can feel surprisingly stressful even for confident dressers, and that stress almost always shows up in the photographs unless it is addressed before the camera comes out. Amanda Eubank has spent years refining the wardrobe guidance she gives couples, and the result is her extensive beach style guide — a thorough resource that takes the guesswork out of the planning process and lets couples focus on the experience instead.
The most consistent advice for Navarre Beach couples photography is to choose a palette of soft, warm, coastally-friendly tones rather than trying to match identically. Creams, sandy neutrals, soft blues, dusty sage, muted blush, and warm whites all work beautifully against sugar-white sand and a green-tinged Gulf. Hard primary colors, bright neons, or stark blacks tend to dominate frames and pull attention away from faces, which is rarely what couples actually want.
Coordination beats matching. A flowing dress in one tone paired with a complementary shirt and trousers in a related tone produces a more sophisticated look than two outfits that mirror each other exactly. Amanda’s guide explains this principle visually with examples that help couples see the difference, and the result is galleries that feel curated rather than uniformed.
Fabric choice matters as much as color. Linens, soft cottons, gauzes, chambrays, and breathable blends move beautifully in the Gulf breeze and photograph with the kind of texture that adds visual richness. Synthetic fabrics tend to lie flat, wrinkle awkwardly, or reflect light in ways that feel artificial. The guide includes specific brand and silhouette recommendations that perform especially well in coastal humidity.
Length and silhouette also affect how outfits read in the frame. Flowing maxi dresses move beautifully in the breeze and create the romantic, cinematic feel many couples want. For partners in trousers and shirts, a slightly relaxed fit photographs more flatteringly than something tightly tailored, especially on a beach where natural posture tends to soften. Amanda’s guide walks through these subtleties with examples.
Footwear is a small but consequential detail. Most couples ultimately go barefoot, and Amanda usually recommends planning for that from the start rather than fighting it mid-session. Bare feet read naturally in beach imagery, and the gallery loses nothing by skipping shoes entirely. For couples uncomfortable barefoot, simple sandals or slip-on flats work; bulky athletic shoes rarely look right.
Accessories add personality without competing for attention. A delicate piece of jewelry, a wide-brim hat, a flowing scarf, a hair ornament, or a subtle pocket square can all elevate an outfit from fine to memorable. Navarre Beach photographers like Amanda often suggest one or two accessory ideas based on the couple’s overall aesthetic, and the guide includes a curated list of options that photograph well on the coast.
Hair and makeup planning should align with the wardrobe and the time of year. A summer session with high humidity requires different prep than a fall session with crisper air. Amanda is happy to recommend hair and makeup professionals along the Emerald Coast who understand beach-friendly looks that last through wind, salt air, and the inevitable laughter that mists eyes a little.
For couples photographed during proposals or anniversary trips, an element of surprise sometimes shapes wardrobe planning. Amanda discreetly coordinates with the partner doing the proposing to make sure the unsuspecting partner is dressed beautifully without raising suspicion. That kind of behind-the-scenes finesse is part of why photographers in Navarre Beach Florida like Amanda are trusted with these once-in-a-lifetime moments.
Practical considerations belong in the planning too. Strapless tops can be tricky in a Gulf breeze, very sheer fabrics may reveal more than intended in bright light, and dark heavy clothing can become uncomfortable in summer heat. The guide flags these realities alongside the aesthetic notes so couples arrive prepared for the actual conditions of a coastal session.
If couples are also planning broader photogenic outings during their trip — a sunset cruise, a fine dining reservation, a pier visit at twilight — coordinating wardrobe palette across those events can extend the trip’s visual cohesion. The Navarre Beach tourism guide is useful for spotting venue dress codes, and Amanda is happy to suggest mix-and-match pieces that work across multiple settings.
Laying out both partners’ outfits side by side before traveling is one of the simplest, most effective planning steps couples can take. Seeing how the textures and tones relate in one glance reveals mismatches that otherwise only show up in the gallery. Many couples send phone photos to Amanda for a quick second opinion, which she is happy to give in the weeks leading up to the session.
The most important wardrobe truth is that confidence photographs better than perfection. Couples who feel beautiful in their clothes inevitably make beautiful images, even if the outfits are not magazine-pristine. Trust the guide, trust your instincts within it, trust Amanda’s suggestions if you ask for them, and let the rest of the evening unfold without wardrobe anxiety stealing the joy of being together in front of the camera.
One additional outfit principle worth highlighting is the role of texture in elevating an image. Linen wrinkles softly, gauze catches breeze beautifully, knits add visual depth, and woven trims add subtle personality without dominating the frame. Couples who layer textures within a coordinated palette consistently produce galleries that feel more sophisticated than couples wearing perfectly smooth fabrics in the same colors. Amanda’s style guide includes examples of texture pairings that translate especially well to Navarre Beach light, and couples who lean into texture rather than trying to look magazine-flat almost always end up loving how the resulting frames feel.
Another tip couples consistently appreciate is to bring backup options for last-minute weather or temperature shifts. A light wrap, a second top in a complementary tone, or a pair of trousers in a slightly different weight can save a session when conditions surprise you. Amanda will gladly help triage which backup makes sense on the day of, and her experience with shifting Gulf weather means her suggestions are usually right on the first try. Planning for one or two alternatives takes pressure off the entire wardrobe decision and lets couples feel ready for whatever the afternoon brings rather than locked into a single look that may or may not suit the conditions.

