Town Hall Weddings, Elopements & Shorter Coverage

Small Weddings = Big Heart

Not every wedding is a big ol’ all-day event — and honestly? Some of the most magical, personal, and downright fun weddings I’ve ever shot have been the smaller, stripped-back ones. Whether you’re sneaking off to the registry office with your ride-or-dies, planning a city elopement followed by cocktails, or just fancy a few hours of beautiful photos without the full-day fuss, I’ve got you covered.

 

So, what’s the deal?

I offer a 2-hour photography package perfect for town hall ceremonies, elopements, and micro-weddings. It gives us enough time to capture the important bits — your vows, confetti moment (always a fave), group shots with your nearest and dearest, plus a wander for some laid back & fun couple portraits.

Investment: £650 for 2 hours
Extra time: £250 per additional hour if you want to stretch things out a little

What’s included?

  • 2 hours of photography coverage

  • Coverage of your ceremony, family & group shots, confetti moment, and couple portraits

  • A gorgeous private online gallery to view, download, and share your photos

  • Unlimited pre-wedding chats, advice, and hype from me

  • Sneak peeks within 48 hours

 

No need for fancy timelines or complicated logistics — just you, your people and some bloody good photos to remember it all by.

Not sure how long you’ll need?

If you’re thinking “hmmm, we might want coverage for drinks after too…” or fancy an extra hour for getting ready shots, no stress — just let me know when you enquire. You can always bolt on extra hours for £250 per hour. Nice and simple.

Ready to book, or got a question?

If this sounds like your vibe, or you’re not quite sure what you need yet — drop me a message! I’m always happy to have a no-pressure chat about your plans and help figure out what’ll work best for your day.

No wedding is too small, too weird, or too low-key.

If you’re getting married and you want awesome photos, I’m in.

 

View some shorter day/Town hall weddings on the blog: