When couples first get in touch with me about their wedding photography, we usually start by talking about the fun things: venues, colours, outfits, locations for photos, and the kind of atmosphere they want.
But there’s one unglamorous, practical thing that quietly decides how your wedding feels on the day:
Your timeline.
Not the neat little version you pop into a spreadsheet and send to your suppliers, but the real timeline that actually unfolds in real life—with delayed hair and makeup, missing buttonholes, excited hugs, traffic, and that uncle who’s always “just two minutes away”.
As a Hertfordshire wedding photographer, I’m there from the morning preparations until the dance floor is full, so I see how a day flows from start to finish. And there’s one timeline mistake that catches so many couples out—without them realising until they’re right in the middle of their day.
Let’s talk about what that is, how to avoid it, and how to plan a wedding day that feels relaxed, unhurried, and genuinely enjoyable… while still getting the photos you’ve been dreaming of.

If you’ve never planned a wedding before (and most people haven’t!), it’s easy to think of the timeline as a box-ticking exercise:
Done. Right?
In reality, the difference between a “that went so fast, I barely remember it” wedding and a “we felt so present all day” wedding nearly always comes down to timing.
Here’s why your timeline is so important:
1. Small delays snowball quickly
Your hair and makeup run just 15 minutes behind. Then it takes 10 minutes longer than planned to get into your outfit. Someone can’t find the rings. Suddenly you’re 35 minutes late leaving for the ceremony… and everything else is squeezed.
2. Your photos depend on good timing
The best photos happen when people are relaxed. When there’s breathing room. When we’re not racing through group shots because the venue is calling you in for dinner. Good light and a bit of time make a huge difference to how your gallery looks.
3. Your guests feel the knock-on effect
If the ceremony starts late, guests stand longer. If the drinks reception is rushed, they barely get a chance to chat. If speeches overrun, they’re itching to get up and dance. Flow matters for everyone, not just you.
A thoughtful, realistic timeline means:
Here it is:
Most couples plan an ideal timeline, not a realistic one.
On paper, everything fits beautifully. In real life, the timings don’t allow for how people actually move, talk, hug, travel, and enjoy the day.
Common signs of an “ideal but not realistic” timeline:
I once photographed a Hertfordshire barn wedding where the couple had a 1pm ceremony and a 3pm meal. On paper, two hours sounded like loads of time for everything they wanted:
What actually happened:
They had about 6–7 minutes of proper alone time during that entire window. We got lovely photos, but we had to be extremely efficient, and they both said afterwards, “We wish we’d built in more time just to breathe.”
They didn’t do anything “wrong”. They just planned an ideal version of events, not one that allowed for real, human, joyful chaos.

Here are the specific places your timeline is most likely to go off-track—and how that affects your photos.
Hair and makeup is nearly always the first thing to run behind.
Why it happens:
All completely normal things. But if your hair & makeup runs 30 minutes late, it usually means:
Photographer tip:
Aim to be completely ready 30–45 minutes before you think you need to be. Use that time to:
You won’t regret having that cushion.
Family group photos look quick on a spreadsheet. “We’ll do 10 combinations in 20 minutes.”
In reality: it usually takes 30–40 minutes to organise, arrange, and photograph 8–10 group combinations in a relaxed way, especially with larger families.
Why it takes time:
Photographer tip:
You’ll get better, more natural group photos when we’re not rushing or shouting over everyone.

It’s easy to calculate the drive time between locations. What most couples forget is what I call “loading time”:
If Google Maps says “15 minutes”, in reality it might be 25–30 minutes door to door, especially with a large group.
Photographer tip:
Drinks receptions are often where timelines compress the most.
If your ceremony is at 2pm and your meal is at 4pm, it sounds like two hours of mingling, but:
Suddenly your two hours becomes one—if everything runs on time.
This is often when couples say, “We barely saw our guests.”
Photographer tip:
If relaxed, documentary-style photos of you chatting and laughing with your guests matter to you, protect at least 30 minutes of pure mingling time after your portrait shots with no formal photos planned.
If you love golden, romantic sunset photos, your timeline needs to allow for them.
Sunset portraits are usually best taken:
What often happens:
We can make 5 minutes work, but you’ll enjoy it more if you know roughly when we’re going to pop out, and that you won’t be missing anything important.
You’re not expected to know how long everything takes. That’s where your suppliers come in—especially your photographer, because we see the whole day, not just one part of it.
Here’s how I help my couples with timelines:
Before your wedding, I’ll sit down with you (in person or over Zoom) and walk through the day step by step:
From there, we build a timeline that feels like you, not just a rigid schedule.
As a photographer, I’m always thinking about light:
This helps us decide:
You don’t need to worry about any of that—I’ll guide you.
I regularly liaise with:
So that we’re all working from the same timings, and you’re not being pulled in three directions at once.
If I spot anything that looks too tight (for example, only 10 minutes between your ceremony and being called into the meal), I’ll gently flag it and suggest adjustments.
On the day itself, part of my job is quietly keeping an eye on the time so you don’t have to.
I’ll:
The aim is never to make your day feel like a photoshoot, but to shape things so that the photos happen naturally within the flow of the day.
Every wedding is unique, but these rough guidelines are a helpful starting point.
Allow an extra 15 minutes for:
Rough breakdown:
If you only have 1.5–2 hours between ceremony and meal, we can still make it work—we’ll just prioritise what matters most to you.
I usually suggest:
These aren’t rules, but they’re a good framework to start from. When we chat about your plans, I’ll adapt them to your specific day, venue and season.
A well-planned timeline shouldn’t make your day feel rigid. It should do the opposite: it should give you the freedom to soften into the day and be fully present.
Here’s how to keep it feeling like you:
Decide together where you want to slow down and savour things. For example:
We’ll protect those pockets of time in your timeline so they don’t get swallowed by other things.
Share the key timings with:
Give them a rough idea of when group photos will be, when they need to be ready, and who needs to be where. That way you’re not the one chasing people on the day.
Even with the most careful planning, something will run a little late or early. That’s normal.
If you’ve built a realistic timeline with a bit of flexibility:
Your wedding day isn’t a performance to get “right”. It’s a celebration. The timeline is just there to support that.
The biggest timeline mistake couples make is planning for everything to go perfectly, rather than planning realistically for how people and days actually unfold.
You don’t have to figure this out on your own.
As a wedding photographer based in Hertfordshire, I’ve photographed all kinds of days—intimate garden ceremonies, grand barn celebrations, stately homes, rustic barns, chic hotels—and I’ve seen what really works (and what quietly creates stress).
When you book me, you’re not just getting someone to turn up with a camera on the day. I’m there to:
If you’re planning a wedding in Hertfordshire or nearby and you’d like a day that flows beautifully and looks beautiful in your photos, I’d love to chat through your ideas and help you start shaping your timeline.
If you’d like to talk about your wedding plans—or you’d just like a second pair of eyes on your timings—you’re very welcome to get in touch.
We can grab a coffee (or hop on a call), walk through your day from morning to dance floor, and make sure your timeline supports the relaxed, joy-filled celebration you’re imagining.
See how all of this comes together on a real wedding day? Have a browse through some of my recent Hertfordshire weddings here.
For more information on my collections, click here
