One of the most common things I see as a Sydney Wedding Photographer isn’t about flowers, weather, or even nerves.
It’s time!
Or more accurately, the lack of it.
When couples plan their wedding day, timelines often look neat and tidy on paper. Every moment accounted for. Every transition timed to the minute. And while that might sound organised, real life doesn’t work that way.
Your wedding day needs room to breathe.
Not just for photos, but for you.
Here’s what usually happens on a wedding day. No matter how well you plan, things naturally take a little longer than expected, and that’s completely normal:
None of this is a problem -of course not- unless your timeline leaves no room for it.
When everything is tightly packed, you can find yourself watching the clock instead of being present. And that’s not how you want to remember your wedding day.

This part of the day can feel tempting to keep short.
And yes, as a wedding photographer, I can deliver beautiful, timeless, classic, and fun photos in 15 minutes.
A few photos.
A couple of poses.
Back to the party.
But your couple portraits aren’t just about photos.
They’re about remembering the commitment you’ve just made to each other.
They’re about slowing down together, with that quiet sense of relief that all the planning, decisions and stress were worth it.
They’re your first family portraits, a true staple in your lifetime together.
These will be the images you display around your home.
The ones you’ll share on anniversaries.
The ones your children will one day look at.
This is why I always recommend to my couples:
a minimum of 45 minutes for couple portraits.
That time gives you space to relax into it, to enjoy each other, and to allow real, natural moments to unfold, while still having fun.
Your wedding photos won’t remind you of what time dinner started. They’ll remind you of how the day felt.
So when you’re planning your wedding timeline, give yourselves that gift.
Not a rushed schedule.
Not a tightly packed day.
But breathing space.
Time to be present.
And moments that are truly yours.
A calm wedding day doesn’t come from sticking perfectly to a schedule, it comes from having space within it.
When you build buffer time into your day:
The goal isn’t perfection.
The goal is presence.
One thing I always encourage when I photograph weddings is creating a small pocket of time that belongs only to you.
After the ceremony.
After your portraits.
Before the reception fully begins.
No cameras.
No guests.
No questions.
Just the two of you.
You’ve literally just gotten married.
That short pause -even 10 to 15 minutes- allows everything to sink in. It’s often the moment couples remember most clearly, because it’s the first time all day you get to simply be together.
March 4, 2025
