Wedding Photography Sydney Locations

Wedding Photography Sydney Locations

Wedding Expressions are able to capture your bridal shoot location all around Sydney. As professional wedding photographers in Sydney, we cover all regions, taking advantage of beautiful backdrops ranging from open stretch beaches, historic buildings, open bush surrounds and amazing gardens and greenery.

Choosing a wedding photography location shoot for your wedding photography can be a difficult choice. With Wedding Expressions photography you have total flexibility in choosing your wedding photography bridal shoot location anywhere in or outside of Sydney.

To help you in your journey of choosing a location around Sydney or outside of Sydney for your wedding photography, we have listed just a few suggestions that could be used to provide you both with a stunning backdrop as part of your Sydney wedding photography experience.

Wedding Expressions hope that you find the list below to be a helpful guide.

Inner/Outer Sydney City and Sydney Eastern Suburbs – Most popular amongst Brides and Grooms to be

Sydney city and the eastern suburbs of Sydney offer historic buildings, parks and spectacular harbour views that make for a stunning Sydney wedding photography bridal shoot.

Popular spots for your wedding photography in Sydney can include

- The Royal Botanic Gardens, Sydney
- Hickson Road Reserve, Sydney (View of the Harbour and Opera House)
- Dawes Point Park, Sydney (Opera House views)
- Pyrmont Bay Park, Sydney
- First Fleet Park, Sydney (Close to Museum of Contemporary Art)
- Luna Park at Milsons Point, Sydney
- Chinese Gardens, Sydney
- North Hyde Park, Sydney (Arches, fountains, tree paths)
- Observatory Hill (Stunning Sydney Wedding Photography location)

Hills District and Northern Suburbs of Sydney – Sydney Wedding Photographer’s paradise

Offering an abundance of grassy parks, trees and beautiful water views you can both have a lovely natural setting as the backdrop for your Sydney wedding photography bridal shoot

- Rose Gardens, Castle Hill
- Castle Hill Park, Castle Hill
- Swain Gardens, Ku-ring-gai
- Lisgar Gardens, Hornsby
- Flinders Park, North Ryde
- Kissing Point Park, Putney

Hawkesbury and Nepean – For couples that love nature

Featuring amazing river banks, large beautiful trees and attractive gardens makes for lovely wedding photography backdrops as part of your bridal shoot

- McQuade Park, Windsor
- Governor Macquarie’s towns, Wilberforce
- Wisemans Ferry
- Mt Tomah Botanic Gardens, Kurrajong
- Glenleigh Estate, Regentville
- Chapel Hill, Berambing
- Mt Tomah Botanic Gardens, Mount Tomah
- Woodriff Gardens, Penrith
- Penrith Lakes
- Rileys Mountain Lookout, Along Nepean Gorge
- Regatta Park, Emu Plains

Wedding Expressions Photography are a unique Sydney Wedding photography team. Our Wedding Photography team aim to provide you both a photographic memory that will always remind you of the emotion, excitement and love of your Wedding Day Visit us on http://www.weddingexpressions.com.au/index.html

Watch the video related to Wedding Photography

Following Italian wedding photographer Roberto Lavini on a shoot in Tuscany.

Help answer the question about Wedding Photography

What lenses, equipments, etc do you need to start wedding photography?
I have a 12MP dslr, a GN58 flash gun, a tripod and a reflector. I'm thinking of focusing on wedding photography business. Thank you so much for your ideas!

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18 Responses to “Wedding Photography Sydney Locations”

  1. FortMyersPhotography says:

    Interesting video… some helpful tips

  2. msdawn985 says:

    Wonderful video and tips, tried to rate it but it says ratings are disabled. I would give it 5 stars

  3. corky252 says:

    Just what I have been looking for. Very helpful. Thanks

  4. k_hamblen says:

    Wedding photography tutorials: http://www.net-art.it/photomonitor/html/teoria_tecnica/ripresa-tecniche/matrimonio-cerimonia-e.shtml

  5. startpipin says:

    See these tutorials on wedding photography: http://www.net-art.it/photomonitor/html/teoria_tecnica/ripresa-tecniche/matrimonio-cerimonia-e.shtml

  6. fyerfytr says:

    Awesome video, thanks for posting. I have my first wedding next year.

  7. I don't know. says:

    Wow!!! Your question is very important for which I think you should go online and check this out: http://thestylishwedding.com/articles

    Enjoy :)

  8. LoopyTheBubblebrain says:

    Super. I adore his remark ‘Always ask permission to touch the bride’ !! Class gent. Great lesson.

  9. jrp says:

    I suppose you have experience, a portfolio, have taken formal classes and you've done an apprenticeship with an experienced, established professional phtoographer?

    In being a wedding photographer, you will find that you will have dry spells and a lot of free time on your hands; for that reason, I suggest that you expand your business to also include portraits, graduations, Christenings, and maybe even do a little of children and/or baby photos. Those are opportunities to make money ANeD to get your name known. Depending on the area where you're located, you might also want to work for a shop that does on-site photo processing (learn how to operate the equipment, machines, etc… learn as much as you can and keep your eyes and ears open).

    Consider also taking a few businesses classes at the local "Y" or local community college through the Evening Adult & Continuing Education Department; it will help you in more ways than one… taxes, accounting, etc. Talented and skilled photographers go bankrupt all the time because they have no kind of business sense; learn as much as you can.

    Getting started ain't always as easy as we imagine. For that reason you might want to visit a few churches and speak with the Holy Man, leave a few cards or make a professional looking circular and post it on the bulletin boards, do a few freebies or give them as much of a break as you can (use this to build a portfolio, get recommendations… future referrals) for a few people on really tight budgets. Bridal shops often don't say anything but they may expect a "finder's fee" or a tip (which I am sorely against), flower shops, beauty salons, etc. Speak with the proprietors and let them know that you're just starting out; take a few of their cards and also offer to pass them to any and all of your clients. Do you know anyone in the catering business? That's also a plus.

    Don't give up. Starting is always the most difficult part! Listen, all the talent and skills in the world won't amount to anything unless you have the passion to persevere and overcome those obstacles you're sure to encounter; so, hang in there. Good luck and very best wishes.

  10. funniq says:

    Great stuff … thanks …

    Love you softbox for your speedlight. Is there also something like that for the Nikon’s speedlight SB900 that you know?

    Thanks in advance.

    Cheers, andré from Holland

  11. japheth z says:

    equipment is not the main consideration.
    Skill and experience is.
    If you have never done a wedding before then before you jump in you need to work as an assistant for a while so that you do not completely and utterly mess up the couples big day.
    Good wedding photography is a skill which can only be learnt with practice so going solo straight is NOT a good idea.

    a

  12. Jessica says:

    Well, I do quite a few different types of photography, including weddings.

    Just because you are 14 means only that age limitations apply. You have the youth and energy to craft your photographic trade for decades to come though! Having a Nikon D40 is a great thing. I shoot a D90 with a Tamron 18-270mm f/3.5-6.3 and love it! The fact you can edit is a great plus, seeing that digital photography has a requisite for that kind of talent.

    Now, on to your questions…

    You've already have gotten started. You have a great camera, you're computer savvy and have drive. Now you need the channels to utilize those energies. How about the school paper? The local paper? Be a free-lance photographer for them! Learn what clients want and find out how you can supply it. How will you make yourself unique (differentiate) as compared to other photographers? Think about this.
    As to how to further get started in wedding photography, I learned by taking lots of photographs and reading up on books in the library. I also asked other photographers (like you're doing here) on some tips. It takes time, and you have lots of that!

    As for your camera, right now the D40 is fine. Learn the operations of the camera if you haven't already. Knowing your tools is of utmost importance to getting the most from them. In a few years, think about upgrading possibly. Always look to buy the best lenses you can afford. The lens will outlive the camera by decades! Read articles, look at product reviews and see what is the right kind of lenses and bodies for what you want to do. I still have my 6 year old D70 and lenses because my wife is getting into photography and she loves it.

    You can do some work on wedding photography right now. Not for pay possibly, but doing some free-lance work and then showing the bride and groom your work afterwards would set you up for something in the near future. I'd say that the earliest you could get some sort of paying work is at 17 or 18. Don't ask me what you could charge… your work/portfolio quality will determine that in a few years.

    What kind of pictures? What do you WANT to take pictures of? What really makes you want to snap that picture? That is the motivation you need to focus on! That is what helps differentiate your work from everyone else! I do a lot of landscape, macro, flowers/plants and specialty photography personally.

    The best thing to do is:

    1) Learn your camera and lenses. What/where are they good at performing? How many lenses do you really need to just start? If you only have one lens then fine. Learn its strengths and weaknesses. Know the camera operations by memory so that when conditions change, you can change the settings accordingly.
    Do you have a good prime lens (50mm f/1.8), a good low end zoom (18-70/105mm), a good high focal length zoom (70-300mm)? Maybe, like me, you have a good "walk about" lens (18-270mm). Even if you just have the 18-105mm Nikon lens the D40 came with, it's a very good lens! You can do a lot of fine work with that lens.

    2) Read up on the types of photography you'd like to do. Take notes. How about some classes in middle or high school? Go to the library and check out some books so you can refer back to them. That is a no-cost option! Learn the basics of exposure and composition and how to get different effects from different settings of the camera. Don't rely on your software to make a semi-good picture better. Learn to take a great picture right off the bat so you don't have to do any rework on the computer.

    3) Learn from your mistakes. Why did the picture come out bad, over or under exposed? How can you work to not do that again? Why is is that certain pictures came out fantastic? What did you do correctly so you can repeat that? Since you have a digital camera, you can usually take several shots of the same subject and see how different settings make the picture change to you liking.

    4) Have fun doing whatever you do. I have seen so many people get into photography and get lost in the details that they forget to have FUN!

    Good luck!

  13. rettmank says:

    Wedding photographers charge by the event, not the hour.

    My wedding photographer had shot professionally for ten years, but mine was only her fourth wedding. Her experience as a pro combined with her inexperience at weddings led to a price of $750 for the day.

    This included:

    * Four scheduled hours of work (though she showed up early and also toured the venue with me the day before, so it's more like six hours total).
    * Light editing of all pictures (color, contrast, removing any photos that had come out badly) and burning them to CD. This CD also came with copyright release, so I could print the photos legally. Most photographers charge maybe $250 for the copyright-released CD alone.
    * No prints

    You seem less experienced than my photographer was, so if I were you, I'd charge $500 for the above.

    The high yearly saleries and $2000/gig prices are reserved for professional photographers who have lots of experience with weddings. If your sister's friend is going to you, it's because she can't afford them.

  14. WeddingPhotographs4U says:

    Great tips and great video. Thanks so much.

  15. ThinaDoukas says:

    Hi there.. like your style.. good use of available light.. cheers from Thina Doukas Photography in Sydney

  16. dicedtomatoe says:

    I'm not familiar with any magazine with wedding photography as its main subject.

    However, Inside Weddings has lots of good photos. Some of them are studio shots of course, but lots of them are actual wedding shots. I use it to help get the couple focused on the types of photos they like best during pre-planning.

  17. SirWilliamGalindo says:

    Thank you a lot… I’m going to get married and it is a really good guide for us.. thanks indeed.

  18. mom2havenandlace says:

    I know in our town we have bridal fairs at our mall and another at a local hotel. These fairs have booths set up so that businesses can get their names out there. I would start with that. Then word of mouth does wonder. Start some sort of reward program for people who refer you to other people. You may check and see if a local floral shop wants to team up with you and have packages that way. Also check out theknot.com. They are a wedding website that I believe is set up by area of the country.

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