The couples, in their own words.
Gathered over ten years, from messages and cards.
We were photographers first, and slow to ask for reviews, because we did this for love long before we did it as a business. These are the words couples sent us over the years, lightly tidied and never invented.
Loved by couples from 9 countries
Small, intimate weddings on Mahé, Praslin and La Digue, 2016 to today
Only six guests, so we expected a quick shoot. He stayed five hours and said, every wedding matters the same, it is your day. Four years on, that beach photo is still our screen background.
We booked three hours and they stayed for five, because we were having too much fun. Ryan hates cameras, and here he looks like a model. Months later a Christmas card arrived with our photo on it.
A COVID wedding, just us and two witnesses. They never treated it as a plan B, they treated it as our real wedding, because it was. They livestreamed the ceremony for our families and folded their faces into the final film.
We wanted our Russian traditions, the bread and the salt, and they had researched every moment so nothing was missed. They even found the stretch of beach where we first met, years earlier.
He got to know us before the camera ever came out, so almost every photo is just us being us. The film feels like a short movie. The USB was shaped like a seashell and came with a handwritten letter.
We flew sixteen people from Australia and needed it flawless. The photos arrived on a hard drive engraved with our names. When my mother fell ill and could not travel, they edited a whole album just for her.
Our day opened with a tropical downpour. They already had a plan, moved us into the plantation house, and reshot the beach the next morning for free. In the film you can hear the rain on the roof during our vows.
I was six months pregnant when we finally took our photos, and he found gentle angles that made me feel radiant. The film holds a shot of me touching my belly during our first dance. It is the most tender thing we own.
The photographer spoke German, which we never expected, and guided us in both languages. They filmed my eighty-two-year-old grandmother dancing, a moment we were too busy to catch ourselves.
Ours was a Hindu ceremony with a western reception, and they knew exactly when each ritual would happen. The priest barely noticed the camera. They even tucked a traditional Indian sweet into our welcome box.
We changed the date three times and they were the only supplier who never charged us extra. He knew exactly where to frame the Coco de Mer palms, and the drone footage over the water is breathtaking.
A French and English ceremony, and they gave us a photographer who could welcome both families. They caught my niece running into the sea, and then my husband going in after her fully dressed.
The most remote spot in Seychelles, and they made the logistics feel effortless. They flew in a day early to scout in the humidity and had a backup for everything. The drone shot over the giant tortoises still stops people cold.
We were living in Abu Dhabi and planned the whole thing remotely, and they made it painless with calls and a clear timeline. The photos of us on the marina are the most beautiful we own.
A small, intimate day with eight guests, and they carried the logistics so we did not have to. The sunset colours in our photos are exactly how it felt. Warmly recommended to any couple.
They arrived early, knew the light and the loveliest corners, and simply made it easy. The film and the photos are perfect, and the little keepsake they sent means the world. An honest price and a whole heart.
Honest about the stars
For years we kept no tidy review file. We have the messages, the cards, the long voice notes after a gallery landed. We have gently cleaned them into what you read here, kept every couple's meaning, and invented nothing.
That is also why some read a little short. A phone call and a thank-you card do not always make a paragraph. If it would help you decide, we are glad to introduce you to a couple who married the season before you.
Your words could sit here next season. It starts with one message.

