Do you want to know the very best way to ensure you have a fun, relaxing wedding day?
Have an amazing wedding day timeline!
A well-planned wedding day timeline will help your day flow smoothly and make accommodations for when things run behind (as they inevitably do!). As a Temecula wedding photographer, I help every couple I work with on their wedding day timeline, but there is a huge difference in timelines depending on your wedding season. So I thought an article on wedding timelines for fall, winter, spring, and summer would be helpful!
The last question is if you’re getting married at a venue that will host both your ceremony and reception – in fact, the timelines below are specifically for that type of venue, as 90% of the weddings I photograph take place in one location!
Before we get to seasonal timelines, we need to establish general guidelines for how long things take on the wedding day. Depending on if you’re having a first look and if there’s travel involved, I sometimes start up to 5 hours before the ceremony.
Ah, the first look! You’ve likely heard of the first look by now, where the couple see each other before the ceremony. This is a highly personal decision, but there are a few cases where I definitely recommend it on your wedding day.
You want a lot of portraits and variety on your wedding day.
If you look at my recommended times for portraits, I suggest 90 minutes for all of those pictures on your wedding day, at minimum. Without a first look, all those portraits need to be squeezed into cocktail hour. I’ve done it many times, but couples that choose a first look definitely get more images and more variety in their portraits simply because we have more time and can go to different locations within the venue.
You won’t have any sunlight left after your grand entrance into your reception.
This is primarily for late fall or winter weddings. When a couple gets married in the summer, the sun can set at 8:00 PM or later. This means I get “bonus” time where I can take them out during dinner for another 20 minutes and get some gorgeous sunset portraits. Having extra time in the evening helps to not only get beautiful sunset images, but it’s there in case portraits during cocktail hour took longer than anticipated.
Consider a summer wedding date! In the spring and summer, most ceremony times are set to 5:00. This means you’ll have 3 hours of post-ceremony sunlight, which translates to more time for gorgeous images at your wedding venue.
Ceremony sunsets are absolutely gorgeous! The light is soft and typically “wraps” around the couple in an extremely flattering and romantic way!
If you want sunset ceremony images, then I definitely recommend a first look so you can get important portraits completed prior to the ceremony. Otherwise you may run out of natural light during cocktail hour. There’s always residual light after the sun goes past the horizon, but it doesn’t last long!
Feel free to take a look at the timelines below! However, I do have a few quick shortcuts to creating your own timeline. The estimates below are based on weddings where everything is taking place at one location.
Once you have your sunset time, the ideal ceremony time is an hour and a half before sunset. As I mentioned previously, a lot of spring and summer weddings have a ceremony time of 5:00, regardless of sunset time. So this tip may be more applicable to fall and winter weddings.
If you’re having a first look, your pre-ceremony photography coverage should start 4 hours before your ceremony.
Without a first look, your pre-ceremony photography coverage should start 3 hours before your ceremony.
For a fall wedding, we’ll be using a date of October 15th and the time the sun sets in Temecula on this day, 6:14 PM.
Positives for a Fall Wedding
Negatives for a Fall Wedding
6:14 PM sunset
Ideal ceremony time – 4:30 PM
1:30: Details and getting ready
2:30: Get dressed
3:00: Individual family photos
3:30: Bridal party photos
4:00: Pre-ceremony portraits conclude / photograph ceremony site and guests entering
4:30: Ceremony (30 minutes)
5:00 – 5:20: Family portraits
5:20 – 5:40: Bridal party portraits
5:40 – 6:00: Married couple portraits
6:15: Grand entrance into reception
6:14 PM sunset
Ideal ceremony time – 4:30 PM
12:30: Details and getting ready
1:30: Get dressed
2:00: First look
2:45: Individual family photos, followed by combined family photos
3:30: Bridal party photos
4:00: Pre-ceremony portraits conclude / photograph ceremony site and guests entering
4:30: Ceremony (30 minutes)
5:00 – 5:30: Any additional family portraits / bridal party portraits the couple wants
5:30 – 6:00: Married couple portraits
6:15: Grand entrance into reception
For a winter wedding, we’ll be using a date of January 15th and the time the sun sets in Temecula on this day, 5:04 PM.
Positives for a Winter Wedding
Negatives for a Winter Wedding
5:04 PM sunset
Ideal ceremony time – 3:30 PM
12:30: Details and getting ready
1:30: Get dressed
2:00: Individual family photos
2:30: Bridal party photos
3:00: Pre-ceremony portraits conclude / photograph ceremony site and guests entering
3:30: Ceremony (30 minutes)
4:00 – 4:20: Family portraits
4:20 – 4:40: Bridal party portraits
4:40 – 5:00: Married couple portraits
5:15: Grand entrance into reception
5:04 PM sunset
Ideal ceremony time – 3:30 PM
11:30: Details and getting ready
12:30: Get dressed
1:00: First look
1:45: Individual family photos, followed by combined family photos
2:30: Bridal party photos
3:00: Pre-ceremony portraits conclude / photograph ceremony site and guests entering
3:30: Ceremony (30 minutes)
4:00 – 4:30: Any additional family portraits / bridal party portraits the couple wants
4:30 – 5:00: Married couple portraits
5:15: Grand entrance into reception
For a spring wedding, we’ll be using a date of April 15th and the time the sun sets in Temecula on this day, 7:20 PM.
Positives for a Spring Wedding
Negatives for a Spring Wedding
7:20 PM sunset
Ideal ceremony time – 5:00 PM
2:00: Details and getting ready
3:00: Get dressed
3:30: Individual family photos
4:00: Bridal party photos
4:30: Pre-ceremony portraits conclude / photograph ceremony site and guests entering
5:00: Ceremony (30 minutes)
5:30 – 5:50: Family portraits
5:50 – 6:10: Bridal party portraits
6:10 – 6:45: Married couple portraits
7:00: Grand entrance into reception
7:20 PM sunset
Ideal ceremony time – 5:00 PM
1:00: Details and getting ready
2:00: Get dressed
2:30: First look
3:15: Individual family photos, followed by combined family photos
4:00: Bridal party photos
4:30: Pre-ceremony portraits conclude / photograph ceremony site and guests entering
5:00: Ceremony (30 minutes)
5:30 – 6:00: Any additional family portraits / bridal party portraits the couple wants
6:00 – 6:45: Married couple portraits
7:00: Grand entrance into reception
For a summer wedding, we’ll be using a date of July 15th and the time the sun sets in Temecula on this day, 8:00 PM.
Positives for a Summer Wedding
Negatives for a Summer Wedding
8:00 PM sunset
Likely ceremony time – 5:00 PM
2:00: Details and getting ready
3:00: Get dressed
3:30: Individual family photos
4:00: Bridal party photos
4:30: Pre-ceremony portraits conclude / photograph ceremony site and guests entering
5:00: Ceremony (30 minutes)
5:30 – 5:50: Family portraits
5:50 – 6:10: Bridal party portraits
6:10 – 6:45: Married couple portraits
7:00: Grand entrance into reception
7:45: Sunset portraits with married couple
7:20 PM sunset
Likely ceremony time – 5:00 PM
1:00: Details and getting ready
2:00: Get dressed
2:30: First look
3:15: Individual family photos, followed by combined family photos
4:00: Bridal party photos
4:30: Pre-ceremony portraits conclude / photograph ceremony site and guests entering
5:00: Ceremony (30 minutes)
5:30 – 6:00: Any additional family portraits / bridal party portraits the couple wants
6:00 – 6:45: Married couple portraits
7:00: Grand entrance into reception
7:45: Sunset portraits with married couple
Each couple has a different approach to their reception events! One important note when planning reception events is what time your photography coverage concludes. I typically don’t stay through the very end of the reception. If you also have a scheduled photography end time, you should plan to have your last major reception event 30 minutes before your photographer leaves. This leaves a bit of a buffer just in case things run a bit behind.
8 hours is a typical wedding photography collection for the couples I work with; below is a sample reception timeline added to the Summer Wedding Timeline above!
7:20 PM sunset
Likely ceremony time – 5:00 PM
1:00: Details and getting ready
2:00: Get dressed
2:30: First look
3:15: Individual family photos, followed by combined family photos
4:00: Bridal party photos
4:30: Pre-ceremony portraits conclude / photograph ceremony site and guests entering
5:00: Ceremony (30 minutes)
5:30 – 6:00: Any additional family portraits / bridal party portraits the couple wants
6:00 – 6:45: Married couple portraits
7:00: Grand entrance into reception
7:05: Couples’ first dance
7:10: Toasts
7:15: Dinner
7:45: Sunset portraits with married couple
8:15: Father/daughter and mother/son dance
8:30: Additional toasts
8:45: Bouquet and garter toss
9:00: Cake cutting, followed by open dance
9:30: Photography concludes
I hope this article was helpful in your wedding planning! Remember to consult with your own photographer or ideally your wedding planner! Each couple has an individual approach to their day and these are meant to be guidelines in the initial stages of your wedding planning!
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