Thank you for entering my little place on the internet.

Hello lovely, I’m Taylor, sometimes Elle, I’m an autistic queer artist that is constantly evolving and trying new things with photography. I suppose if you are on this page you may already have looked at my portfolio and seen something different.

If you jumped here first. I’ve been a fashion and modeling photographer since 2011 and in 2021 made the soft transition to a more intimate photography session that is more then just boudoir. What you see here is the result of introspecting on the impact my photography sessions have had on the women who have worked with me or who have chosen to make a change in their life and I am diving headfirst into making this a priority.

I’ve created a safe space for anyone who struggles with mental health and trauma responses, anyone who is involved in any aspect of the adult industry, anyone in the LGTBQA+ community, and I welcome anyone within any of the religious communities with an open mind and open arms.

Meet Artist-at-Large Taylor Grey

Artist-at-large Taylor Grey has been shooting fashion photography and portfolio build shoots for rising models since 2011 and has crafted a vast portfolio with a unique style that is bold, sassy, visually stunning and organic.

Grey, who uses they/them as pronouns, shifted the focus of their work from shooting beautiful women in unique and non-studio environments into a photography niche that has become a signature style that photography contemporaries and clients know instantly.

Taylors style is a rarity in the photography world and is a challenge to duplicate precisely, Straight off camera work, meaning pure photographs, with natural or source light only. However, this style also goes beyond the photography technique and extends into the posing and wardrobe.

Taylor’s posing style is organic, empowering and strong, and they have been personally styling women for the shoots using a combination of their own wardrobe and Grey’s personal client wardrobe since 2014.

They are an queer autistic with anxiety and gender dysphoria, and they’ve come to understand that this career has become not only therapeutic to them but also to the women that have worked, or continue to work, with them.

After the staggering and heartbreaking loss of a beautiful agency represented fashion model and Hispanic mother, that they personally inspired to model, Taylor has chosen to continue shooting to help ease mental health issues and trauma responses in the women that chose to work with them.

Often unspoken, they have been known to say very little and yet know what each woman needs to feel better about themselves, often creating positive change in them with each successive session.

Grey’s deep passion for photography and understanding of mental health issues and trauma response means that not only are they understanding about where a woman comes from but they are a mental health advocate who strives toward putting light into dark places.

Rosalejandra