Inside a West Point Military Wedding: The Saber Arch Exit, Traditions and Real Emotion Behind the Day
May 14, 2026

I’m Alex Kaplan, a wedding photographer and videographer based in New Milford, NJ, serving Northern NJ, NYC, and the Hudson Valley. For over 30 years, I’ve helped couples enjoy their day without feeling rushed — while I quietly capture the real moments, natural portraits, and genuine emotions you’ll still love decades from now.
May 14, 2026

As a West Point military wedding photographer, I have learned that the most important moments are never the ones you stage. The saber arch exit is a good example. Officers in formation, sabers raised, a couple stepping through into the world as husband and wife for the very first time. And then, before the formality even has a chance to settle, the bride throws her head back and laughs.
That laugh is the photograph. Everything else is just context.
I have spent more than 30 years documenting weddings across New York, New Jersey, and beyond, and military weddings at West Point hold a gravity unlike anything else I photograph. If you are drawn to ceremony, history, and the kind of emotion that does not perform for a camera, you can see what that looks like in my wedding portfolio.
West Point sits above the Hudson River in the Hudson Valley, about an hour north of New York City. The United States Military Academy has been training Army officers since 1802, and every stone on that campus carries the weight of that history. The chapel. The parade grounds. The quiet between moments. When a couple chooses to marry here, they are stepping into something much larger than a single afternoon.
Military weddings have a ceremonial precision that most wedding days do not. There is protocol for the processional, protocol for the exit, protocol for nearly every movement in between. And yet underneath all of that structure is an enormous amount of raw, unguarded human emotion. Pride. Relief. Joy. The particular kind of happiness that comes only after something genuinely hard has been survived. As a West Point military wedding photographer, reading that emotional current underneath the choreography is where my attention goes.
The Thayer Hotel, just outside the post gates, is where many couples celebrate following the ceremony. A Thayer Hotel wedding pairs naturally with a West Point ceremony, and the combination creates an environment that photographs beautifully from beginning to end. I work with couples across Northern New Jersey and the New York metro area, and West Point remains one of the most distinctive venues I document.
A saber arch is a traditional military wedding ceremony where uniformed service members form an arch using ceremonial swords or sabers as the newly married couple exits. The tradition symbolizes honor, unity, and the couple’s entrance into married life together. It is one of the most iconic and emotionally charged moments in any military wedding.
The tradition has roots going back centuries in military culture, and Army wedding traditions in particular have preserved it with care. Picture the moment just before it begins. Officers in position, white gloves, pressed uniforms, the kind of stillness that only comes from people who have trained for it. The couple stands at the threshold. Then the sabers go up, one by one, until they cross overhead in a row of steel and ceremony. And then the couple walks through.
In Army ceremonies, the last officer brings the flat of the saber down gently on the bride’s dress as the couple clears the arch. It is a gesture with real meaning behind it, a quiet acknowledgment of what military life truly asks of a family. Most couples know it is coming. And somehow, it still gets them.
What I have found after photographing military weddings is that the arch itself is not where the photograph lives. The photograph lives in the two seconds after the couple clears it. When the formality releases, when the bride forgets to compose herself, when the groom’s shoulders drop and the relief of the whole day comes through in a single expression. That is the story. That is what couples will still feel when they look back at these images 20 years from now.
You can read more about how I approach these kinds of moments in my post on documentary wedding photography in New Jersey.
Military wedding ceremonies are structured by design. The exit has choreography. The dress uniforms are pressed. The formation is precise. Because of all that visible order, some photographers respond by adding even more direction on top of it, trying to manage every moment and leave as little as possible to chance.
I work the other way. My approach is built around staying out of the way long enough for the real thing to happen, and being in exactly the right position when it does. The bride in the photograph above was not directed. She was not told to look natural or to turn a certain way. She just was. And that unguarded reaction is worth more than any posed portrait I could have made in its place.
With more than 625 Google reviews from couples who trusted me with their wedding days, the feedback I hear most often is not about the formal portraits. It is gratitude for the moments that got captured without being staged. The grandmother wiping her eyes during the vows. The groom’s face when the doors opened. The bride losing herself completely in laughter at the bottom of a stone staircase at West Point.
Before the couple even reaches the door, I am already in position. I know where the light is landing. I know which direction they will turn. And I have already thought through what the two seconds after the arch might look like, because those two seconds are the only ones that matter and they cannot be repeated.
When it unfolds, there is maybe a three-second window of real action. Officers raise their sabers, the couple steps through, and it is done. The image either happens or it does not. After more than 30 years photographing weddings, I have learned that anticipation is the skill that separates a memorable photograph from one that almost was. You position yourself before the moment, not during it.
Stone chapel exteriors at West Point can produce beautiful but demanding light. Add the motion of a couple descending steps with officers in full dress uniform on either side, and everything has to be decided before the shutter opens. When it comes together, the resulting image does not look like it was captured at all. It looks like it simply was.
Part of what makes West Point weddings so memorable is the environment itself. Stand on the steps of a post chapel in late October and you can hear the Hudson before you see it, a low constant sound underneath the wind moving through the hardwoods on the far bank. The gray stone holds the cold longer than you would expect, and on overcast afternoons the light comes off it soft and directionless in a way that flatters faces without trying. When the doors swing open and the officers step into formation, you can hear the sabers being drawn one at a time before you can see them clearly, a clean metallic sound that the stone catches and holds for a half-second after each one. None of this is in the schedule. All of it ends up in the photographs.
The Thayer Hotel adds its own layer of elegance to the day. It honors tradition without feeling stiff, and the combination of a West Point ceremony with a Thayer Hotel reception creates a full wedding day that is meaningful from the first moment to the last. The reception rooms feel warm and formal without losing the emotion of the day. Every part of the environment rewards a photographer who knows how to observe rather than control.
For couples drawn to military wedding traditions, to historic settings, or to the kind of authentic emotion that cannot be manufactured, West Point delivers all of it without you having to do a thing.
If you are planning a West Point military wedding, or a ceremony rooted in military traditions anywhere in New York or Northern New Jersey, I would love to hear about your day. I have spent more than 30 years documenting weddings with patience, honesty, and close attention to the moments that matter most. As a military wedding photographer in New York, I have built Alex Kaplan Weddings around exactly this kind of work.
Give me a call at 917-992-9097 or 201-834-4999, or send a note through my contact page. I photograph military weddings throughout New York and Northern New Jersey, and I would be honored to document yours.
About Me — But Really, It’s About You
The most meaningful wedding photos never come from stiff poses.
They come from the quiet laugh you didn’t think anyone saw.
The look on your partner’s face during the vows.
The warmth of your people all around you.
I’ve been doing this for over 30 years — and I still get nervous before every wedding.
Not because I’m uncertain, but because I know how much it matters.
After photographing hundreds of weddings over the past few decades, I’ve learned something simple:
The best photos happen when you feel fully present.
That’s why I work calmly, behind the scenes — guiding when it helps, then stepping back when the real moments unfold. I’m always anticipating what’s next, so you never have to think about a thing.
My goal is simple: to help you relax, feel confident, and walk away with photos that feel like you — not a filtered version of someone else’s idea of perfect.
Most of my couples say the same thing:
“We’re so glad we didn’t have to worry.”
trusted by over 800 couples In NYC & NJ you’re in great hands.
201-834-4999 | 917-992-9097
alex@alexkaplanweddings.com
I’d love to hear what you’re planning. I’ll personally reach out to learn more and see how I can help.