A professional wedding photographer freezes time in the form of photography so that you can relive your wedding day at your desire. Photographs can speak thousands of words, so however you interpret it in your own words, it will have its own unique story. But to achieve the art of freezing time and creating magical photography, a formula is needed…and not just with the camera.
The evolution of your wedding day memories starts and finishes without the camera. A recce and careful planning of your wedding location is required. One must also have a personality to create a magnetic bond with both guests and the betrothed couple. This is a skill that you are born with. Once you have mastered the art of photography and memory catching, using your own signature styles, superior work is then carried out in a modern day darkroom. A professional photographer must also present a story distinctively too...
Your story is inspired by you and told by me...
Place in United Kingdom
Nikos Wedding Photography
Sue Ryder Thorpe Hall Hospice is a specialist palliative care inpatient unit in Peterborough. Providing care and support for people who are living with life-limiting conditions, as well as supporting their families. Leonie and Jay chose this stunning venue to help support the hospice by using the grounds for their wedding. It really is a beautiful venue and creates the perfect backdrop for weddings.
This was my first wedding in Scotland. But what you cannot see, is a packed, busy Edinburgh. The thing with a couple walking in any busy street, let alone the Royal Mile, is that people do give way and respect the precession (so to say) of the married couple. I had already planned my journey for their post-ceremony wedding photos and this had so much symmetric satisfaction that it was destined to be used as a backdrop. I love my super-wide Olympus lens, it never fails me. My gorgeous couple Ruth and Nikki (who is Scottish) got married at the Caves and went on to Princess Street Gardens.
This is a destination pagan wedding of Maximilian and Cinzia. They are from Italy and have chosen Glastonbury as their destination wedding. I have covered many pagan weddings, mostly in Glastonbury and at the world heritage site of Stonehenge. I am lucky enough to be born and raised in Somerset and have Glastonbury minutes away from me.
My Italian couple went all out pagan traditional and had a handfasting. This is the original wedding ceremony as we know it in the UK. A lot of the pagan traditions and handfastings are what we have seen now in today’s weddings. This photo was taken at the very spiritual Glastonbury Tor.
This is the beautiful floating "church" on Rutland Water, Normanton Church. Lynette and Eugene celebrated their 12 Year anniversary by renewing their vows and wearing the same wedding garments they had on their wedding day. No matter which side of Normanton church you look at, from close to at a distance, this is a photographer's dream. The tower photo is (as far as I know) my signature shot for this venue. No one has copied it, so far...