An internal note on the photography standard.
Every photograph on every therapist profile on this site is taken by our team. We do not use stock images, social-media reposts, photos provided by therapists, or photos sourced from any external photographer. The standard is rigid because the alternative — letting therapists supply their own photographs — produces the kind of inconsistent, often misleading, often outdated gallery that defines most of the wider outcall industry.
The photography happens at our own studios, on a scheduled day, with the same photographer and the same lighting. New therapists are photographed before their first booking; existing therapists are re-photographed at intervals, usually annually. The point is to keep the gallery honest — a client booking a therapist on the basis of a photograph should meet that therapist when she arrives.
What we do not do: heavy retouching, body modification, age-shifting, hair-colour adjustment, or any other manipulation that would create a discrepancy between the photograph and the person. The standard is essentially photojournalistic — colour-corrected, lit attentively, but not transformed.
What this means in practice for clients: when a therapist arrives at your room, she looks like the photographs. Her hair colour matches; her skin tone matches; her age matches. The mismatch that defines so many outcall bookings — the photograph that promised someone different from the person at the door — does not happen with us, because the photographs are taken honestly in the first place.
This is also why our roster grows slowly. The photography day is a non-trivial operational commitment; therapists who are not certain they are joining the roster do not get photographed; therapists who are not photographed are not on the public site. The forty-five practitioners visible to clients today represent the full sequence of these standards being applied repeatedly over years.