This guide covers the proposal itself: the approach, the speech, the knee drop, the ring exchange, and the first few minutes after she says yes.

There are almost no hard rules. Present an engagement ring. Ask her to marry you. Everything else adapts to you. What follows is not a template. It is built on more than 1,200 proposals and the patterns that consistently work.

The guiding principle is pace. Move with intention in the days before, so nothing is improvised on site. Slow down in the key beats themselves, because a rushed proposal is one she feels less of and the camera catches less of.

Confidence comes from knowing what happens next. Bookmark this page. Come back to it. Make it your own.

On the day, two things should feel right. The proposal should fit who you are as a couple. And it should hold up twice over: strong in photographs decades from now, and fully lived by her as it happens.

Arrival

Proposals typically begin one of two ways: you arrive together, or you are already in place when she arrives.

If you arrive together, the game plan is locked before you walk in. If you arrive first, your Paris proposal photographer has a few minutes alone with you to fine-tune the choreography, show you where to stand, and review the proposal posture that photographs best.

Either version works. Arriving first is the version we prefer when the logistics allow it. There are rare exceptions where she arrives before you, depending on the concept, but those are the 5% we plan around in advance.

Proposal arrival at Château de Villette — man in tuxedo waiting at the end of a floral path with a live guitarist and ground smoke effects, Paris
The arrival at Château de Villette — a live guitarist, low smoke along the path, and gold floral arches leading to the proposal spot. She walks in not knowing what’s ahead.

The approach

When she arrives after you, step toward her the moment she enters, take her hand, and lead her to the proposal spot.

If you walked in together, you are already hand in hand and will begin the approach side by side.

From here, both scenarios are the same. Halfway down the path, pause briefly and hold her close. Let her take in the setting. Then keep moving.

That pause is worth more than it looks. It settles your nerves. It tells her, without words, that something is about to happen. And it gives her the seconds to appreciate the flowers, the backdrop, and the setting you designed for her before any of it becomes background to the diamond ring.

Couple approaching the proposal setup on the Peninsula Paris rooftop at night — red roses, candlelight, crescent moon decor, and the illuminated Eiffel Tower ahead
The approach, Peninsula Paris rooftop — he leads her down the red carpet path toward the Eiffel Tower, giving her a few seconds to take in the roses and candles before the question.

Positioning

By default, she stands on your right and you on her left, both of you facing the backdrop — château, Eiffel Tower, whatever you chose.

The reason is practical: we want a clean line on the ring exchange when you slide the engagement ring onto her left ring finger — the fourth finger. There is one exception. If she has told you her right facial side is her stronger one, her preference wins and she moves to the left instead.

Either way, stand parallel to the photographer and the backdrop, leave a small space between you, and hold her hands softly as you begin to speak.

Couple standing in proposal positioning on a Paris rooftop — he on her left, she on his right, hands held facing the Eiffel Tower, surrounded by red roses and candles at night
The positioning — he stands on her right, she on his left, both facing the Eiffel Tower. Hands held, small space between them, parallel to the photographer. The speech begins here.

The speech

The speech is not the question. The speech comes first. “Will you marry me?” comes later, on one knee, with the open ring box.

This is when you still have her full attention, because once you are on one knee she will be too moved to retain much of anything. Say what sounds like you, in your own words. Polish is nice; sincerity matters more.

A dedicated section on what to say, what to leave out, and how to prepare appears further down the page.

Marriage proposal speech inside a Paris palace salon — the couple standing parallel and facing each other holding hands, she in a black tulle cocktail dress laughing warmly and he in a black suit speaking, surrounded by a curving red-rose floral installation, gold multi-arm candelabras with tall ivory tapers, heavy red velvet drapery, and a gilt rococo mirror above a chevron parquet floor
A Paris palace salon before the knee drop — hands held, eyes connected, the full red-rose installation framing the speech. She hasn’t stopped smiling yet.

The knee drop

When the speech is done, unbutton your jacket. Take out the ring box, but keep it closed for now. Show it to her. Take a small step back. Then drop to one knee.

Study the illustration below — every marker points to a detail that affects the photographs.

Paris proposal posture illustration — gentleman on one knee at Trocadéro with Eiffel Tower backdrop, showing ideal kneeling stance, rear toe pointed down, open ring box, jacket unbuttoned, and optimal positioning for the ring exchange
The posture we walk our clients through before the big question — every green marker points to a detail that shapes the photograph.

The posture

The single most important visual detail is your rear foot. The toe should point straight down into the ground, not drag along it.

The posture does not affect the experience itself. It has an outsized effect on the photos. Practice it before the day. This is the Paris proposal posture guide in one sentence — and it is non-negotiable.

Leave a small gap between your back knee and the heel of your front foot. Use whichever knee feels natural. The old rule about kneeling on the left knee like a knight is largely a blog myth and not worth worrying about.

Keep your jacket open as your arms come up to present the ring box — otherwise the lapels bulge and the whole line of the photograph goes with them. Mark the underside of the box with a small indentation so you can feel the correct orientation without looking down.

Man on one knee proposing at the Shangri-La Paris terrace at night — open ring box presented, white roses and candles surrounding the couple, Eiffel Tower lit in the background
Shangri-La Paris rooftop — rear toe pointed down, jacket open, the ring box held steady between them. She covers her face before she can even answer.

The four words

Present the open ring box to her and ask the question: Will you marry me?

Then stop talking. Wait. Stay on your knee for 30 to 45 seconds.

It will feel like an eternity. It is worth it. If she comes down to your level, celebrate — those are some of the most distinctive photos we capture.

Nighttime marriage proposal at the Peninsula Paris Secret Table rooftop, the Eiffel Tower illuminated in the distance, the gentleman on one knee holding a single red rose and his partner kneeling down to meet him at his level, surrounded by hundreds of red roses, tall taper candles, crescent moon decor, and a red carpet runway
Peninsula Paris Secret Table, after hours — she came down to his level before the ring even made it out of the box. The Eiffel Tower lit, the rooftop to themselves, and the kind of photograph the coaching above is built around.

The ring exchange

Once she says yes, carefully place the ring box on the floor — flat, stable, open — and only then take the engagement ring out of the box.

Stand up together, returning to how you stood during the speech.

Take her left hand — the one facing the camera — with your left hand underneath, palm up, so her hand rests on top of yours. With your right hand, hold the ring between thumb and index finger, or thumb, index, and middle finger for finer control, and bring it to the knuckle of her fourth finger.

Pause. Look her in the eyes — remember this one. Then slide the ring to the base of her finger.

Close-up of the ring exchange during a Paris proposal — tattooed hand sliding a pear-cut diamond engagement ring onto her fourth finger, Eiffel Tower blurred in the background
The ring exchange — he holds her left hand underneath, palm up, and slides the diamond to the base of her fourth finger. The Eiffel Tower sits out of focus behind them.

The first kiss

Seal the engagement with a passionate, well-earned first kiss — then do not turn toward the photographer.

Give yourselves several minutes inside the reaction: the tears, the laughter, the questions she will almost certainly start asking. Your photographer is working the whole time, catching all of it from a respectful distance.

This is the part that anchors the gallery. It is also the part you will want back one day, to remember exactly how it felt.

First kiss after a Paris proposal on a rooftop terrace — newly engaged couple kissing with the Eiffel Tower in the background, diamond ring visible on her hand
The first kiss, caught from a distance — her ring hand holds his face, the Eiffel Tower sits behind them, and the photographer stays out of it completely.

Champagne and the toast

When the artist senses you are ready, they will step in for the first toast with your fiancée.

A champagne pop is optional but encouraged. Request a second, more affordable bottle for the photos and keep the better label for the actual toast. It makes a striking save-the-date image — and the couple always loves the pop itself. Champagne says France and celebration like no other drink.

Keep the toast real. This is not a photoshoot. It is your first toast as an engaged couple. She may even take over and make her own. Take a few more minutes together, and when it feels right, turn away from the camera again.

Then set the flutes down. What comes next is your first portraits as a newly engaged couple in Paris.

Newly engaged couple toasting with champagne at a candlelit rooftop dinner table in Paris — pink hydrangeas and wisteria surrounding them, Eiffel Tower illuminated at night in the background
The first toast as an engaged couple — rooftop dinner table, hydrangeas and wisteria behind them, the Eiffel Tower lit across the skyline. She’s smiling before the glasses even touch.

The proposal speech, in depth

The speech is the part of the proposal that gentlemen ask about most. Not because it is complicated — it is not — but because it is the part where sincerity meets pressure, and neither comes easily when you are standing in front of her with a ring box in your jacket.

A proposal does not sneak up on you. You know it is coming, and you only get one chance to make this speech. Prepare it.

That does not mean turning it into a performance. It means thinking clearly, ahead of time, about what you want to say, so nerves do not rob the speech of its weight. Even gentlemen who are naturally good with words find that emotion changes things.

What to say. The strongest proposal speeches do three things. They look back briefly at where the relationship began. They say why she matters so deeply. And they look ahead to the life you want to build together.

Simplified to a formula: why you love her, why you want to marry her, and why you want the future to be with her.

Keep it personal. Keep it specific. Keep it in your own voice.

What not to say. A full inventory of every trip. Inside jokes that need explaining. Anything that sounds written for the photographer rather than for her.

On spontaneity. Leave room for it in the delivery, not in the drafting. The speech itself should not be improvised on the spot. This is too important, and the one chance you get matters too much. The goal is not to sound rehearsed. It is to make sure the words that matter come out.

On reading it. Some gentlemen memorize. Some carry a small card with bullet points. Some read a fully written speech. All three are fine. The woman standing in front of you is the last person in the world who will judge you for caring enough to prepare.

Some gentlemen also work a sequence of handwritten messages or photographs into the proposal itself, walking her through memory lane before popping the question.

One last thing. Rehearse the speech out loud, alone. What feels right in your head can sound different when you say it.

There is no single right format. But there is one wrong one: treating the speech casually, and hoping the words will just follow.

Couple holding hands during the proposal speech on a Paris rooftop at night — live violinist performing to the side, red roses and gold candelabras surrounding them, Eiffel Tower beam visible in the background
The speech — hands held, a violinist playing to the side, the Eiffel Tower behind them. He prepared this. It shows.
Newly engaged couple sharing a dip kiss on a Paris rooftop at night — red roses lining the terrace, champagne glasses behind them, and the illuminated Eiffel Tower centered in the background
From the first step to the first toast — and then whatever comes after that. The guide ends here. The rest is yours.