Wedding Planning Tips with the Full Day Photography Package

· 7 min read
#wedding photography tips #full day photography #wedding timeline #Queensland weddings #wedding planning #group photos #first look #reception photography
Renae in a dark purple and black wedding gown and Adam in a black suit hold hands while walking through a grassy field at Ocean View Estates during their couple portraits session.

Why full-day wedding coverage matters in Queensland

Your wedding day is one continuous story, not a six-hour highlight reel. After more than 500 weddings across Queensland, we have learned that the images couples treasure most rarely happen on a tight schedule.

Full-day coverage is not about taking more photos. It is about being there for the unscripted moments between the big events:

  • The nervous laughter while buttoning a shirt.
  • A grandmother straightening a veil.
  • Two best mates sharing a quiet word before the ceremony.

These are the photographs couples reach for years later, and they almost never happen on cue. When we arrive early and stay late, something shifts: you stop noticing the cameras, guests relax, and the day unfolds naturally. We are not chasing moments – we are already there when they happen.

Short coverage forces a choice: getting-ready or dance floor? With full-day coverage, you do not have to choose. Every chapter of the day gets the attention it deserves.

Reflection of bride Renae and groom Adam kissing is visible in a shiny car side mirror, with a tattooed hand wearing a wedding ring resting on the car near the mirror at Ocean View Estates.

Building a timeline that feels relaxed

The difference between a calm wedding day and a stressful one usually comes down to the timeline. After seeing hundreds of run sheets, the best ones all have one thing in common: breathing room.

Build in buffer time.

Every transition takes longer than you expect – hair and makeup, travel, group photos. Add 15–30 minutes of padding to each. That buffer is never wasted; it becomes time for a quiet cup of tea, a moment with your partner, or a candid photo you did not plan for.

Work backwards from sunset.

In Queensland, golden hour is the anchor point for your portrait session. Whether you are in the Sunshine Coast hinterland or on a Brisbane rooftop, build your afternoon so couple portraits fall in that last hour of soft light.

  • In summer, this often means starting portraits around 5:00 pm.
  • In winter, closer to 4:00 pm.

Keep the morning unhurried.

We typically arrive 2–3 hours before the ceremony. It sounds like a lot, but it disappears quickly. Getting-ready coverage works best when nobody is rushing. Some of our favourite images come from the quiet 20 minutes before everyone moves toward the ceremony.

Share the run sheet.

Print or share the timeline with your bridal party and key family. When everyone knows where they need to be and when, the day flows.

Renae and Adam stand on a dirt path surrounded by trees at Ocean View Estates, sharing a kiss during their couple portraits session.

Making the most of your venue's light

Queensland light is beautiful but changeable. Understanding how light moves through your venue is one of the most practical ways to improve your photos.

Scout the ceremony space at ceremony time.

A space that looks perfect at 10 am can be harsh at 2 pm. For outdoor ceremonies, check where the sun will be. Patchy shade (half sun, half shadow) is the hardest light to work with. Full open shade or full sun is far easier than a mix.

Embrace overcast days.

Cloud cover is a gift for photography. Soft, even light is flattering from every angle and makes colours richer. Some of our most beautiful work has been under cloud at Maleny, Tamborine Mountain, and the Gold Coast hinterland.

Use indoor light intentionally.

If your getting-ready room has a large window, that single light source creates beautiful, directional portraits. We will often position you near that window for key moments. If you can choose between rooms, the one with the biggest window almost always wins.

Plan for sunset portraits.

Even five minutes at golden hour is worth it. If your reception starts at 6:00 pm and sunset is 6:15, we will slip out briefly for a few frames. Those images often become album favourites.

Renae and Adam stand facing each other in a grassy field at Ocean View Estates during their couple portraits session, with Renae holding a dark bouquet and wearing a purple and black dress, and Adam in a black suit.

Managing group photos without the stress

Group photos are the part of the day many couples dread, but a little preparation makes them quick and painless.

Make a list in advance.

Write down every combination you want:

  • Both families together
  • Each side of the family separately
  • Grandparents
  • Bridal party
  • Close friends / uni friends / workmates

Share that list with us before the day. With a clear list, we can usually finish in 15–20 minutes. Without one, the same photos can take 45 minutes as people remember extra combinations after everyone has walked away.

Nominate a wrangler.

Choose one person from each family who knows everyone and can gather them quickly. We will direct the shots, but we need someone who can call Aunty Sue by name.

Schedule groups straight after the ceremony.

Guests are already together, dressed up, and in a good mood. This is the ideal window. If you wait until after canapés, people scatter, change shoes, or leave.

Keep it short and warm.

We move fast, keep the energy high, and make it fun. Nobody wants to stand in the sun for half an hour. Quick, organised, done – then everyone can get to the drinks.

Renae and Adam share a kiss during their couple portraits session at Ocean View Estates, standing on a grassy path with trees in the background. Renae wears a dark purple gown and holds a bouquet, while Adam is dressed in a black suit.

First look vs ceremony reveal

There is no right or wrong answer here – just what feels most like you. We have photographed hundreds of both, and each has real strengths.

The case for a first look

A first look gives you a private moment together before the ceremony. No audience, no performance – just the two of you. For emotional or nervous couples, this can be grounding.

Timeline-wise, it opens up your afternoon:

  • You can do portraits before the ceremony.
  • You can head straight to canapés afterwards.
  • You spend more time with your guests instead of disappearing for photos.

From a photography perspective, we often get more time, better light, and more relaxed expressions. First-look images tend to feel intimate and unguarded.

The case for a ceremony reveal

Seeing each other for the first time down the aisle has a unique electricity. That shared moment, in front of everyone you love, carries a weight that is hard to replicate.

Ceremony reveals do mean portraits happen afterwards, so you will need 30–45 minutes between ceremony and reception for bridal party and couple portraits.

Our advice

We will never push you either way. If you are unsure, ask yourself:

  • Do we want a private, quiet moment together first?
  • Or do we want the shared energy of that aisle reveal?

Either way, we will plan the timeline and light around your choice.

The bride Renae and groom Adam share a dance at the reception in the Ocean View Estates Function Room. Renae wears a purple and black gown with sheer sleeves, and Adam is dressed in a black suit with a purple boutonniere.

Reception coverage tips

Receptions are fast-moving and often low-light. A few simple decisions can transform your photos.

Talk to your venue about lighting.

Fairy lights, candles, and warm uplighting photograph beautifully. Overhead fluorescents and strong coloured LED washes do not. If you can, choose warm, soft lighting. If you are hiring a DJ or band, ask them to keep dance floor lighting simple – warm white or soft amber works far better than rapidly cycling colours.

Schedule speeches during dinner.

When speeches happen while guests are seated and attentive, we can capture both the speaker and the reactions around the room. Late-night speeches, after the bar has been open for hours, rarely land the same way.

Plan your first dance earlier.

The later the dance, the lower the energy and the more guests have left. The best dance floor photos usually happen when the party is peaking, not winding down. Right after speeches or cake cutting keeps momentum going.

Tell us about surprises.

If there is a surprise performance, video message, or unexpected guest, let us know in advance. A quick note in the run sheet means we will be in the right place at the right moment.

Do not skip the details.

We arrive at the reception space before guests to photograph table settings, florals, signage, and styling. Your vendors have worked hard on these details, and they matter for your album and their portfolios. If your venue allows early access, let us know the timing.

The bride and groom share a kiss at the ceremony stage at Ocean View Estates — On The Lake, surrounded by guests throwing flower petals.

What couples wish they had known

After 500+ weddings, we hear the same reflections again and again.

“We wish we had slowed down.”

The day moves quickly. Build in pauses:

  • Five minutes alone together after the ceremony.
  • Time to actually sit and eat your dinner.

Those quiet beats become anchoring memories.

“We should have worried less about the weather.”

Queensland weather is unpredictable, especially in storm season. We have photographed in rain, wind, and heat, and never seen a wedding ruined by weather. Some of our most dramatic images come from afternoon storms rolling over the hinterland. Trust your photographers to adapt.

“The photos we love most are not the ones we planned.”

The formal portraits are important, but the image on your bedside table in ten years is often a candid:

  • A flower girl tugging her dress.
  • Your partner wiping their eyes during the vows.
  • Your dad on the dance floor.

Full-day coverage is how we catch those.

“We are glad we invested in the full day.”

Couples who choose full-day coverage never tell us they wish they had booked fewer hours. The opposite is almost always true with shorter packages. The getting-ready nerves and the late-night laughter – those bookend moments complete the story.

Your wedding day is one continuous narrative, from the first quiet morning moments to the last song. Our job is to be there for all of it, so nothing gets lost.

Frequently Asked Questions

How many hours should full-day wedding photography cover?

Most of our full-day packages run 10 to 12 hours, from getting-ready through to the dance floor. This gives us enough time to document every chapter of the day without rushing between moments.

What is the best time of day for wedding portraits in Queensland?

The hour before sunset is unbeatable. In South East Queensland that falls between 4:30 and 6:00 pm depending on the season. We always recommend building your timeline so couple portraits land in that golden window.

Do we need a first look if we want full-day coverage?

Not at all. Full-day coverage works beautifully with either a first look or a ceremony reveal. A first look simply gives you more flexibility in your timeline and a private moment we can document intimately.

How long do group photos take at a wedding?

With a prepared list and a good wrangler, we typically finish extended family and bridal party groups in 15 to 20 minutes. Without a list, the same set can take 45 minutes or more.

Is full-day photography worth the extra cost?

After shooting 500+ weddings, we can say confidently that couples who book full-day coverage never regret it. The getting-ready details, the quiet moments between events, and the late-night dance floor shots are often the images couples treasure most.

Featured Weddings

Related Articles