Wedding Photographers Australia
Trusted wedding photographers across Australia — candid and natural, fine art, film, and traditional. Save favourites and shortlist by region.
29 results

Chris Jack Photography
Brisbane, QLD
Iris Faith Photography & Film
Brisbane, QLD
Shae Imagery
Brisbane, QLD

onemustardseed
Brisbane, QLD

CaptiveLight Photography & Videography
Brisbane, QLD

Jonathan Mendoza Photographer
Brisbane, QLD

Greg Taylor Photographer
Brisbane, QLD

Emotional Moment Photography & Film
Brisbane, QLD

Baker Boys Band
Melbourne, VIC

In Love Weddings
Brisbane, QLD

Evernew Studio
Brisbane, QLD

Baker Boys Photography & Videography
Melbourne, VIC

A Thousand Miles Photography
Brisbane, QLD
Feature Weddings - Photo & Film
Brisbane, QLD

Grainy Days Visuals
Brisbane, QLD

Studio Towski
Brisbane, QLD

Taylor Kezia Photography
Brisbane, QLD

DMS Photography
Brisbane, QLD
Rod Noendeng Photography
Brisbane, QLD

Veri Photography - QLD
Brisbane, QLD
Joy Philippe Photography
Brisbane, QLD
Whistler Li Photography
Brisbane, QLD

Sage & Meadow Studios
Brisbane, QLD

Karolina Creative
Brisbane, QLD
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Plan with confidence
How to choose a wedding photographer in Australia
Pick the look before you pick the person
The Australian wedding-photography scene has shifted firmly toward natural, in-the-moment shooting — relaxed candids and gently-directed couple portraits now lead by a wide margin, with a blend of traditional and candid coverage close behind. Fine art and film bring a smaller, more loyal audience. Strict-traditional, posed-only photography is now the minority. Look at 30–40 frames from a photographer's actual recent weddings, not the highlight reel — the everyday gallery shows you what your day will really look like.
How many hours of coverage do you actually need?
Eight hours is the most-booked Australian package — getting-ready through cake cut. Six hours covers ceremony, portraits, and reception start. Ten hours covers the full reception including farewell. If your ceremony and reception are at separate venues, add an hour so the photographer can transit and still capture family portraits without rushing. Most photographers will tell you honestly which package fits your runsheet — they'd rather right-size the booking than overshoot.
Do you need a second shooter?
A second shooter (often the lead's regular collaborator) covers parallel bridal-party prep, captures guest reaction shots during the ceremony, and gives you wider venue coverage. Worth considering for weddings of 100+ guests, getting-ready in two locations, or where you want both bridal and groomsmen prep covered. The add-on typically lifts the package by a few hundred dollars — confirm the exact figure in writing before booking.
What's a realistic deliverable timeline?
Plan on a small first round of preview images a few weeks after the wedding and the full edited gallery — usually a few hundred frames — somewhere between week six and week ten. Albums run on their own clock, often a couple of months after the gallery lands depending on revisions. Delivery speed is the line couples talk about most in reviews, both when it goes well and when it slips, so lock the dates in writing rather than relying on a verbal estimate.
Plan an unplugged ceremony
Most Australian couples now ask guests to put phones away for the ceremony — that's the going norm, not the exception. A quiet front row sees the vows with their own eyes, and your photographer gets a clean line of sight to the ring exchange without a wall of screens. A short line in the celebrant's welcome script (or a small sign at the aisle) handles it gracefully — phones come back out for cocktails and the dance floor.
What does the contract need to cover?
Coverage hours, deliverables, deposit and balance schedule, sick-day or emergency back-up plan, raw-image policy (most photographers don't release raws — that's industry-standard), print and gallery licence terms, and cancellation/postponement clauses. Australian wedding photographer deposits typically sit around a quarter to a third of the package price. Ask directly: what happens if our date moves, and what's the back-up plan if you can't shoot the day?
Brief a short shot list — not a checklist
A focused 5–10 item must-have list (great-grandparents together, the bride's grandmother's ring, a photo with the dog) is gold. A 60-item Pinterest checklist is the photographer's nightmare and yours — it pulls them out of the moment chasing items they could have captured naturally. Pull your final family-group list straight from Your Guest List once it's locked, and brief the photographer on dynamics that need handling sensitively (separated parents, recently bereaved relatives) — they'll thank you for it.
Build the runsheet around golden hour
The light drives the portraits — golden hour sits roughly in the last hour before sunset and slides with the season. We build at least 30 minutes of post-ceremony portraits with the couple, 20 minutes for family group shots, and a quiet 10-minute window during reception for night portraits. The Day-of Runsheet sorts this automatically when you set the ceremony time and venue, so the timing fits the venue you've actually booked, not a generic template.
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