Wedding Day Checklist: 10 Things to Plan for Great Photos

Weddings · 9 min read · By Kaushik Bathia · Updated 2026-06-06

Couple on their wedding day, well planned and relaxed

Key takeaways

  • The smoothest, best-photographed weddings are quietly well planned, a realistic timeline is the foundation.
  • Build 15-30 minutes of buffer around every key moment; days always run later than expected.
  • Protect a short slot for couple portraits near golden hour, the source of treasured images.
  • Prepare a focused shot list and a family member to gather groups quickly.
  • Share the plan with your photographer in advance so coverage is built around your day.

After photographing more than a thousand celebrations, we have learned that the smoothest, best-photographed weddings are not the most expensive, they are the best planned. A realistic timeline, a tidy getting-ready space, a short shot list and a little thought about light make an enormous difference to both your day and your photographs. Here are the ten things we ask every couple to plan, so the day runs gently and the photography takes care of itself.

1. Build a realistic timeline

A realistic timeline is the single most important piece of wedding planning, because almost everything that goes wrong on the day comes down to running out of time. Map the day hour by hour, getting ready, ceremony, portraits, groups, reception, and add 15 to 30 minutes of slack around each, so one delay does not topple the rest.

Share it a week ahead with everyone who needs it: your photographer, coordinator, wedding party and key family. A shared, realistic schedule is what lets the photography happen calmly rather than in a scramble.

2. Plan the getting-ready space

Morning preparations set the tone for the whole gallery, and they depend entirely on the room. Choose a tidy space with plenty of natural light near a window, and keep clutter, bags, hangers, packaging, out of shot. A calm, bright corner produces far better getting-ready photographs than a dim, messy one.

Gather your details, rings, invitations, shoes, jewellery, perfume, flowers, in one place so they can be photographed beautifully without hunting around. These small images tell the story of the morning.

Bride's details and getting-ready space arranged for photography
A tidy, well-lit getting-ready space and gathered details transform the morning's photographs.

3. Make a short, specific shot list

A short shot list guarantees the photographs that matter most to you. A good photographer captures the day naturally, but a focused list of must-have images, particular people, family combinations, or moments unique to you, ensures nothing is overlooked in a busy day.

Keep formal group shots to around ten or fewer; they always take longer than couples expect and eat into the celebration. Discuss the list in advance so it can be built sensibly into the timeline.

4. Plan for golden hour

Protect a short slot for couple portraits near golden hour, the hour before sunset, when the light is softest and warmest. Even 10 to 15 minutes then yields some of the most romantic images of the day. Sunset varies hugely by season, from around 21:20 in midsummer to 15:55 in midwinter in London, per timeanddate.com, so we plan it around your exact date.

Couple portraits are the first thing sacrificed when a day runs late, and the photographs couples most regret losing. Building a brief golden-hour pause into the timeline is the simplest way to guarantee them.

Approximate London sunset time by month (local)JanMarMayJunAugOctDec16:3018:1020:4521:2020:1017:5015:55
Approximate London sunset time by month (local). Approximate local sunset, London. Source: timeanddate.com.

5. Appoint a family wrangler

Ask a confident relative or friend who knows both families to gather people for the group photographs. One organised person calling names saves twenty minutes of searching and keeps the energy up, while the couple stay relaxed rather than rounding up guests themselves.

Let key family know in advance that they are needed for photos, and roughly when, so everyone is in the right place. This single step is the difference between quick, happy group shots and a drawn-out, chaotic scramble.

6. Think about the weather, and a backup

Whatever the season, agree a weather plan with your photographer: indoor or covered locations for portraits and groups, and the flexibility to step outside when conditions allow. British weather is unpredictable, so a backup turns a grey or wet forecast from a worry into a non-issue.

Overcast light is soft and flattering, and rain often clears quickly or adds atmosphere. With a plan in place, the weather becomes something to work with rather than fear.

7. Look after yourselves and your suppliers

Eat, drink water and pause to breathe through the day, you will look and feel your best for it, and it shows in the photographs. Equally, a quick meal and a moment to sit keeps your photographer, videographer and band sharp for the evening.

We are at our best when we have kept pace with the whole day, and small kindnesses, a seat and a plate at the right moment, keep everyone performing. A well-fed, well-paced team delivers a better day for everyone.

8-10. The finishing touches

The final three are quiet but important. Eight: confirm timings and details with every supplier in the final week, and prepare a contact sheet so they can reach each other. Nine: delegate day-of tasks to your wedding party so you are not managing logistics on the morning. Ten: have an engagement or pre-wedding shoot beforehand, so you are relaxed in front of the camera on the day.

With these in place, you can hand over and simply be present, which is exactly when the best photographs happen. The planning is all in service of letting you enjoy getting married.

Relaxed couple enjoying a smoothly run wedding day
With the plan shared and tasks delegated, your only job on the day is to be present.

There is no such thing as too much planning for the day you will look back on for the rest of your life. If you would like to talk through your timeline, we are always happy to help, it is part of what we do.

About the author. Kaushik Bathia has photographed more than 1,200 weddings and celebrations over 25 years from his Northwood Hills studio, with a specialism in Asian weddings across London and the UK.

Related: Asian wedding photography, golden hour wedding photos, how to prepare for your wedding day photos, get in touch.

Good to know

Frequently asked questions

A realistic timeline with generous buffers. Almost everything that goes wrong with wedding photography comes down to running out of time, so a well-planned, shared schedule is the foundation of a smooth, well-photographed day.

Add 15 to 30 minutes of slack around each key moment, getting ready, travel, the ceremony, the meal. Days always run later than expected, so buffers stop one delay from toppling the rest of the schedule.

Even 10 to 15 minutes near golden hour is enough for beautiful couple portraits. Protect this slot, it is the first thing sacrificed when a day runs late and the source of the images couples treasure most.

Keep the list to around ten combinations, share it with your photographer, and appoint a confident relative to gather people. Letting key family know in advance keeps it fast and painless.

We recommend it. A pre-wedding shoot helps you get comfortable with the camera and your photographer, so you feel relaxed on the day, which shows directly in more natural wedding photos.

At least a week ahead, ideally earlier. Early sharing lets us plan coverage, position for key moments, advise where the schedule is tight, and arrange a second photographer if your day needs one.

Based in Northwood Hills

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