To reach the ceremony, guests boarded boats. There was no other way in. Rafaela, a pansexual bride, and Nathalia, a pansexual nonbinary broom, married on Sept. 13, 2025, at Pouso das Flores, a remote caiçara community along the coast of Paraty, Rio de Janeiro, accessible only by water. The couple lives in Paraty, and the choice of venue was less a logistical decision than an honest one: this is where and how they actually live.

Fishing boats anchored in calm bay waters off the beach at Pouso das Flores in Paraty, Brazil.

Rocky coastal shoreline with calm blue waters and green hills at Pouso das Flores in Paraty, Brazil.

Small boats docked at a wooden pier in Paraty, Brazil, with lush green hills in the background at Pouso das Flores.

Arriving From the Sea

Rafaela and Nathalia did not walk down an aisle. Instead, each arrived by boat from a different direction, accompanied by their families, and met for the first time that day at the ceremony space by the sea. The geometry of it, two vessels converging on the same shoreline, carried its own quiet logic. Nothing about the moment required explanation.

Pink ginger blossoms bloom amid lush tropical leaves at Pouso das Flores in Paraty, Brazil.

Bride Rafaela smiles in a white robe as a makeup artist works on her at Pouso das Flores in Paraty, Brazil.

A woman in a red top trims tropical flowers into repurposed glass bottles at Pouso das Flores in Paraty, Brazil.

They had spent the morning apart, getting ready separately before their first look, which meant that when they finally saw each other at the water’s edge, the anticipation had been building since sunrise. Catharine Sant’Ana, the photographer behind Alma Afetiva photography, documented the full arc of the day, from those private morning hours to the moment the boats touched land.

A fisherman cleans fresh fish at an outdoor station near the beach at Pouso das Flores in Paraty, Brazil.

Fresh fish fillets in a bowl being prepared outdoors at Pouso das Flores in Paraty, Brazil.

Handpainted wooden sign reading Pouso da Cajaiba, Paraty-RJ, Brasil at Rafaela and Nathalia's wedding.

The palette the couple chose drew directly from what surrounded them: soft whites, earthy greens, sandy neutrals, weathered wood tones and deep ocean blues. They did not need to impose a color story onto Pouso das Flores. The Atlantic Forest and the coastal landscape supplied it.

A smiling woman in a red top holds a woven basket while picking peppers in a lush garden at Pouso das Flores.

Rafaela and Nathalia share a warm hug outdoors at Pouso das Flores in Paraty, Brazil.

Lush tropical venue at Pouso das Flores in Paraty, Brazil, with a hammock and palm trees for Rafaela and Nathalia's wedding.

A smiling man plays acoustic guitar while relaxing in a hammock on the porch at Pouso das Flores in Paraty, Brazil.

Bride Rafaela smiles as a makeup artist dabs her face during wedding prep at Pouso das Flores in Paraty, Brazil.

The Caiçara Community as Collaborator

The florals followed the same principle as everything else: minimal, organic, and made to recede into the landscape rather than claim attention. Greenery and simple arrangements worked alongside the Atlantic Forest rather than against it, allowing the surrounding environment to function without interruption.

Local food, prepared by the caiçara community itself, anchored the reception. This was not a catered approximation of regional cuisine but the actual cooking of the people who live and work in that place. The meal was, in that sense, the most direct possible expression of where Rafaela and Nathalia chose to celebrate. “The entire wedding was shaped around their real life in Paraty and their connection to the place,” says the couple’s wedding photographer Catharine Sant’Ana. “Choosing a remote caiçara community accessible only by boat was already a deeply personal decision.”

What surprised them most, she says, was how natural everything felt inside a process that could have felt complex. “Planning a wedding in a remote community could have felt complex, but instead, it became something deeply welcoming and collaborative. The warmth of the people, the openness of the environment, and the support they found along the way made the experience feel even more meaningful.”

Guests unload cases of Heineken and Império beer at Pouso das Flores in Paraty, Brazil, for Rafaela and Nathalia's wedding.

Sandy beachfront courtyard at Pouso das Flores in Paraty, Brazil, with hammocks, bunting flags, and tropical greenery.

Guests gather outside a white cottage with red shutters at Pouso das Flores in Paraty, Brazil, during Rafaela and Nathalia's wedding.

Three Years, Then a Forró

Rafaela and Nathalia were engaged for three years before September arrived. When the moment came for a first dance, they skipped the slow ballad entirely. Instead, they danced forró, a traditional Brazilian rhythm whose syncopated footwork and close-hold partnering requires actual commitment to learn. So they committed: the couple took forró lessons in the months before the wedding specifically to be ready for this one song at this one moment.

Bride in a sleek white gown and lace-trimmed veil draped over her face at Pouso das Flores in Paraty, Brazil.

Bride Rafaela walks a lush jungle path in a white gown and lace veil at Pouso das Flores in Paraty, Brazil.

Bride Rafaela smiles with eyes closed in a white gown and lace veil at Pouso das Flores in Paraty, Brazil.

The choice was not decorative. Forró is rooted in the culture of northeastern Brazil and carries a particular energy, joyful, communal, physical, that a slow first dance simply cannot replicate. For a couple who built their celebration around the authentic textures of Brazilian life in Paraty, it was the only logical conclusion to the ceremony.

Nathalia helps Rafaela button her white dress shirt while getting ready at Pouso das Flores in Paraty, Brazil.

Rafaela and Nathalia stand with their backs to the camera in a lush garden at Pouso das Flores in Paraty, Brazil.

Rafaela and Nathalia embrace from behind at Pouso das Flores in Paraty, Brazil, in a black-and-white film photo.

On Getting Ready

Both Rafaela and Nathalia dressed independently that morning, each preparing in their own space before the first look brought them together. Their attire was handled entirely by them, a cohesive approach that kept both looks within the same considered visual register as the rest of the day.

The morning apart gave each of them a private hour with the day before it became shared, before the boats and the sea and the community and the forró. That quiet time—separate and anticipatory—belonged only to them.

Rafaela and Nathalia share their first kiss as newlyweds outdoors at Pouso das Flores in Paraty, Brazil.

Rafaela and Nathalia share a tender moment in their wedding attire amid lush greenery at Pouso das Flores in Paraty, Brazil.

Nathalia in a linen blazer with bird embroidery links arms with bride Rafaela in a lace veil at Pouso das Flores.

Rafaela and Nathalia exchange wedding ring boxes during their ceremony at Pouso das Flores in Paraty, Brazil.

Finding the Right People

Planning a wedding as an LGBTQ+ couple in an industry still largely organized around traditional formats requires more intention and care. “One of the main challenges is navigating a wedding industry that is still largely structured around traditional expectations,” says Sant’Ana. “Finding vendors and spaces that are truly welcoming and understanding can require more intention and care. However, choosing the right people made all the difference in creating a safe and genuine experience.”

Rafaela and Nathalia embrace and share champagne outside Pouso das Flores in Paraty, Brazil.

Bride Rafaela in a white gown and lace veil sips a drink outdoors at Pouso das Flores in Paraty, Brazil.

A wedding guest in a linen blazer sips from a small glass at Pouso das Flores in Paraty, Brazil.

At Pouso das Flores, that safety was present from the start. The community’s warmth and the openness of the environment gave the couple room to celebrate without negotiating for it. The remote location, which might have seemed like an obstacle, turned out to be one of the reasons everything worked. Fewer assumptions travel by boat.

Rafaela and Nathalia walk a jungle path at Pouso das Flores in Paraty, Brazil, holding drinks and smiling.

Rafaela and Nathalia walk a forest path at Pouso das Flores in Paraty, Brazil, laughing and holding drinks.

Barefoot bride in flowing white lace gown walks on sandy beach at Pouso das Flores in Paraty, Brazil.

Their advice to vendors who want to serve LGBTQ+ couples well is direct: “Listen first, assume less. LGBTQIA+ couples don’t need to fit into traditional formats. They need space to create something that reflects who they are. Respect, openness and genuine care make all the difference in creating a safe and meaningful experience.”

Rafaela and Nathalia hold hands at Pouso das Flores, showing a crab cuff detail and arm tattoos.

Rafaela and Nathalia walk hand in hand on the beach at Pouso das Flores in Paraty, Brazil.

Rafaela and Nathalia share a celebratory shot on the beach at Pouso das Flores in Paraty, Brazil.

Rafaela and Nathalia share a moment on the beach at Pouso das Flores in Paraty, Brazil, as a dog watches nearby.

Meaning Over Performance

Rafaela and Nathalia’s advice to other LGBTQ+ couples planning a wedding distills everything their own day demonstrated. “Create a wedding that feels true to your life, not to expectations,” says Sant’Ana. “Choose a place and a format that genuinely represents who you are as a couple. When you focus on meaning instead of performance, everything becomes more natural, more emotional and more unforgettable.”

Beach wedding setup at Pouso das Flores in Paraty, Brazil, with colorful bunting, pillows and white tables on sand.

Casa Viccas wine bottle with two amber-filled glasses on a linen-draped table at Pouso das Flores in Paraty, Brazil.

Hands holding a delicate gold shell chain bracelet at Pouso das Flores in Paraty, Brazil.

A person in a linen blazer with crab embroidery holds a woven boutonniere at Pouso das Flores in Paraty, Brazil.

Close-up of a linen blazer with ocean embroidery, raffia fish boutonniere, and bolo tie at Pouso das Flores in Paraty.

Rafaela and Nathalia hold hands on the beach at Pouso das Flores in Paraty, Brazil, smiling in wedding attire.

For this couple, meaning looked like a boat ride to a community that fed them real food. It looked like a palette borrowed from the forest and the sea. It looked like two months of forró lessons so that one dance, on one afternoon in September, would feel like them.

Rafaela and Nathalia smile at each other on the beach at Pouso das Flores in Paraty, Brazil.

Rafaela and Nathalia share a first kiss on the beach at Pouso das Flores in Paraty, Brazil.

Rafaela and Nathalia walk barefoot along a sandy beach in Paraty, Brazil, smiling at each other on their wedding day.

Rafaela and Nathalia kiss barefoot on the beach at Pouso das Flores in Paraty, Brazil.

Rafaela and Nathalia laugh and embrace on the beach at Pouso das Flores in Paraty, Brazil.

Rafaela and Nathalia laugh joyfully on the beach at Pouso das Flores in Paraty, Brazil, one wearing a lace veil.

Rafaela smiles on the beach at Pouso das Flores in Paraty, Brazil, wearing a linen suit with starfish embroidery.

The Photographs

Alma Afetiva, the São Paulo–based photography studio whose name translates loosely to “affectionate soul,” documented the day from the first private morning hours through the forró. Their approach, attentive and unhurried, suited a celebration where the surrounding landscape was always present and where the most significant moments were often quiet ones: a boat crossing water, two people seeing each other for the first time all day, the community gathering to share a meal.

Rafaela and Nathalia share a tender kiss at Pouso das Flores in Paraty, Brazil, framed by a lace veil.

Rafaela and Nathalia share a joyful almost-kiss at Pouso das Flores in Paraty, Brazil.

Rafaela and Nathalia hold hands on the beach at Pouso das Flores in Paraty, Brazil, barefoot in the sand.

Rafaela and Nathalia share a kiss on the beach at Pouso das Flores in Paraty, Brazil, with fishing boats anchored offshore.

Rafaela and Nathalia hold hands smiling on sandy beach at Pouso das Flores in Paraty, Brazil.

Rafaela and Nathalia embrace and share a tender kiss on the cheek at Pouso das Flores in Paraty, Brazil.

“It was a reminder that—when surrounded by the right people and spaces—love can be celebrated with ease, authenticity and a true sense of belonging,” says Sant’Ana. ❤️

FEATURED LGBTQ+ INCLUSIVE AND QUEER AFFIRMING WEDDING VENDORS

Photographer: Alma Afetiva

Wedding Ceremony and Reception Venue: Pouso das Flores

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