5 Wedding Photo Mistakes Couples Make

Full wedding party laughing together on a sunlit lawn, golden backlight coming through the canopy above them

Five Wedding Photo Mistakes I See Again and Again

And exactly how to beat each one

Build air into the timeline

A schedule looks flawless on paper. Ceremony 4:00, photos 4:30, dinner 5:30, every block kissing the next. Then the ceremony runs long, your aunt wants one more hug, the car is late, and the whole evening starts chasing its own tail.
Give it room. Add fifteen minutes of nothing after every big moment: a buffer after the ceremony, a buffer before dinner. Those empty pockets are where the best unposed frames live anyway, the ones where you finally exhale and forget I am there.

Build air into the timeline

A schedule looks flawless on paper. Ceremony 4:00, photos 4:30, dinner 5:30, every block kissing the next. Then the ceremony runs long, your aunt wants one more hug, the car is late, and the whole evening starts chasing its own tail.
Give it room. Add fifteen minutes of nothing after every big moment: a buffer after the ceremony, a buffer before dinner. Those empty pockets are where the best unposed frames live anyway, the ones where you finally exhale and forget I am there.
Bride and groom embracing under a wooden ceremony arch decorated with white florals and hanging lanterns
Bride wiping a happy tear while laughing with a bridesmaid in a blush dress on a green lawn

Keep the family list short and sharp

Hand me a list of thirty-two combinations and we will spend your portrait time calling names into a crowd that already found the bar. Grandma with each grandchild separately, every cousin pairing, light fading the whole time.
Family formals are worth doing well, which means doing fewer. Cut the list to the groupings you will actually frame and hang on a wall. Pick one loud relative from each side to round people up by name. Twenty minutes, done, and you are back at your own party.

Keep the family list short and sharp

Hand me a list of thirty-two combinations and we will spend your portrait time calling names into a crowd that already found the bar. Grandma with each grandchild separately, every cousin pairing, light fading the whole time.
Family formals are worth doing well, which means doing fewer. Cut the list to the groupings you will actually frame and hang on a wall. Pick one loud relative from each side to round people up by name. Twenty minutes, done, and you are back at your own party.
Bride and groom with extended family gathered together under a wooden ceremony arch in the garden
Bride posing with her family, the group arranged together with jungle foliage framing them naturally

Clear the room before you get ready

The window light in your getting-ready room is gorgeous. Behind you sits a pizza box, four water bottles, three chargers, and someone's open carry-on. I can crop tight, but I cannot crop the whole room out.
This fix costs nothing. Pick the corner with the best light, then ten minutes before I arrive, sweep everything else out of frame and hang your dress or suit on a real wooden hanger. The getting-ready photos are quiet and they are some of my favorites, and they sing when the background gets out of their way.

Clear the room before you get ready

The window light in your getting-ready room is gorgeous. Behind you sits a pizza box, four water bottles, three chargers, and someone's open carry-on. I can crop tight, but I cannot crop the whole room out.
This fix costs nothing. Pick the corner with the best light, then ten minutes before I arrive, sweep everything else out of frame and hang your dress or suit on a real wooden hanger. The getting-ready photos are quiet and they are some of my favorites, and they sing when the background gets out of their way.
Bride in her gown seated on a bed holding her bouquet, warm window light filling the tidy room
Groom buttoning his dress shirt in a bright, uncluttered window-lit room during wedding morning preparations

Chase the good light, not the convenient hour

You want portraits the moment the ceremony ends. Reasonable. But a noon ceremony means portraits at half past, sun straight overhead, everyone squinting under hard shadows. That is the least flattering light of the whole day.
The soft, golden light you actually picture comes in the last hour before sunset. Tell me your sunset time and I will build twenty minutes of portraits around it. Slipping out mid-reception for ten is worth it. You will see the difference the instant you open the gallery.

Chase the good light, not the convenient hour

You want portraits the moment the ceremony ends. Reasonable. But a noon ceremony means portraits at half past, sun straight overhead, everyone squinting under hard shadows. That is the least flattering light of the whole day.
The soft, golden light you actually picture comes in the last hour before sunset. Tell me your sunset time and I will build twenty minutes of portraits around it. Slipping out mid-reception for ten is worth it. You will see the difference the instant you open the gallery.
Bride and groom smiling at each other in a close embrace on a waterfront dock at golden hour
Bride and groom face each other holding hands while walking through tall sea grass near the beach at golden hour

Look past the lowest number

The quotes land all over the place, and one of them is cheaper than the rest. What that number rarely shows you is taste: how an editor decides which frames make the cut and which get left out. A good photographer culls hard, hands you the strong work, and protects you from the hundred near-misses nobody needs to see. A cheap one often hands you everything and calls volume value.
So look past the cover images. Ask to see how a full gallery is edited end to end, not just the dozen frames built to dazzle. Hire the photographer whose complete work you trust and whose company you genuinely enjoy for fourteen hours straight. That second part matters far more than most couples expect going in.
If you are mapping out your day and want a steady set of eyes on the timeline, tell me about your wedding. I love helping couples plan it well long before I pick up a camera.

Look past the lowest number

The quotes land all over the place, and one of them is cheaper than the rest. What that number rarely shows you is taste: how an editor decides which frames make the cut and which get left out. A good photographer culls hard, hands you the strong work, and protects you from the hundred near-misses nobody needs to see. A cheap one often hands you everything and calls volume value.
So look past the cover images. Ask to see how a full gallery is edited end to end, not just the dozen frames built to dazzle. Hire the photographer whose complete work you trust and whose company you genuinely enjoy for fourteen hours straight. That second part matters far more than most couples expect going in.
If you are mapping out your day and want a steady set of eyes on the timeline, tell me about your wedding. I love helping couples plan it well long before I pick up a camera.
Close portrait of bride and groom cheek to cheek, smiling at the camera on a waterfront dock
Groom laughing openly as the bride reads from a vow book on an outdoor staircase, tropical greenery behind them