NYC Portrait Photographer for Women — New York City

Stacie Frazier is a New York City portrait photographer specializing in fine art portraiture for women. Based in Manhattan, she works with entrepreneurs, authors, creative professionals, and women at any moment of transition — creating photographs that are polished, powerful, and unmistakably you.

Her work has been exhibited internationally at Paris Photo Week and is forthcoming at Art-Icon in Paris in 2026. She founded her photography practice in 2009 and has spent fifteen years developing a singular approach to photographing women — one that finds the most compelling version of who you already are, not through trial and error, but through fifteen years of instinctively knowing exactly how to capture you at your best.

A black and white portrait of a woman with curly hair, wearing a sleeveless top, showing a tattoo of a butterfly and roses on her upper arm.

Portrait Sessions, NYC

Whether you're building a brand, marking a transition, or simply ready for a photograph that reflects who you are right now — sessions are designed around you. Not a formula. Not a template. A conversation first, then the work.

A woman with curly blonde hair lying on a textured surface, wearing a black lace top and a large black choker necklace.

Boudoir Photography, NYC

Stacie built her photography practice on boudoir — spending thirteen years at Haute Shots in Las Vegas becoming one of the most recognized names in the industry. That foundation informs everything she does now. Expert posing direction and lighting mean you never have to wonder what to do with your hands. Boudoir sessions are available in studio or on location — each tailored to the mood and vision you have in mind.

Working Together

Stacie works with a small number of clients each year in New York City and is available for travel. Sessions are commissioned privately — pricing, timing, and scope are discussed personally, not listed on a menu. She responds to every inquiry personally within 48 hours.

Ready to be photographed by someone who already knows how to see you?