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    Some wedding regrets are expensive. Others only show up months later when you’re scrolling through your gallery thinking: Wait… did we never take a photo of that?

    Because while everyone remembers the first kiss, confetti toss and dramatic sunset portraits, the photos couples often treasure most are usually the quieter, less obvious moments.

    Wedding photographers consistently say the same thing: couples rarely regret taking too many photos – they regret forgetting the meaningful ones.

    Before you finalise your shot list, save this.

    1. The moment before everything begins

    There’s something cinematic about the anticipation before the ceremony – but more importantly, it captures emotions you won’t recreate later.

    Think:

    • The dress hanging up
    • Your suit being buttoned
    • Final makeup touches
    • Deep breaths
    • Last hugs before walking out

    Those in-between moments often become emotional favourites because they capture who you were before becoming newlyweds.

    2. A photo with every immediate family member (yes, individually)

    This sounds obvious until timelines run tight.

    One of the biggest wedding photo regrets couples report is realising afterward they never got a proper photo with a parent, sibling, grandparent or child.

    Create a short family list beforehand and assign someone to gather people quickly.

    Future you will be grateful.

    3. Your guests arriving and interacting before the ceremony

    You planned the flowers, stationery and seating for months – but the energy before the ceremony often disappears undocumented.

    Capture:

    • Guests greeting each other
    • People reading signage
    • Kids running around
    • Quiet anticipation

    These photos tell the story of the day, not just the highlights.

    4. A full-room photo before guests enter

    Reception styling gets a few minutes of perfection before people sit down.

    Don’t forget:

    • Tablescapes
    • Place settings
    • Candles lit
    • Floral installations
    • Wide-angle room shots

    This is especially important if décor was a major investment.

    5. The reaction photos during your vows

    Most couples focus on getting the kiss.

    The real magic?
    Everyone watching.

    Ask your photographer to capture:

    • Parents’ reactions
    • Friends crying
    • Guests laughing
    • Your partner’s face while you speak

    These often become the most emotional images in the gallery.

    6. A proper photo of your hands and rings

    Tiny detail. Huge regret.

    Hands appear in more wedding photos than couples realise – and your rings deserve more than one close-up.

    Get:

    • Ring shots before the ceremony
    • Natural hand moments
    • Close-ups during vows

    7. The “we actually got married” just-married moment

    Not posed portraits.

    That first minute after the ceremony.

    The walking.
    The laughing.
    The “did that really just happen?” expression.

    Some photographers call this the emotional exhale – and it often produces the most natural images of the day.

    8. Your outfit from the back

    You’ll probably have dozens of front-facing portraits.

    But details people often forget:

    • Veil length
    • Dress train
    • Suit tailoring
    • Buttons
    • Embellishments

    Especially if you spent months choosing the outfit.

    9. A private couple portrait away from everyone

    Take 10–15 minutes.

    No bridal party.
    No phones.
    No audience.

    Those quieter portraits often feel the most intimate because they capture the only part of the day that truly belongs to the two of you.

    10. Photos with the people who helped make the day happen

    Not vendors – your people.

    The friend who fixed your veil.
    The sibling who held everything together.
    The aunt who coordinated family.
    The parent who quietly carried the stress.

    These photos age beautifully.

    11. Movement shots

    Perfection is overrated.

    Ask for:

    • Walking
    • Twirling
    • Laughing
    • Dancing
    • Running through confetti

    Movement creates photographs that feel lived in instead of staged.

    12. The final photo of the night

    Everyone remembers the entrance. Almost nobody remembers the ending.

    Whether it’s a sparkler exit, empty dance floor, takeaway coffee or one last quiet hug – take one final image.

    Because endings deserve documenting too.

    The takeaway:

    Your wedding gallery shouldn’t just show what your wedding looked like.

    It should remind you what it felt like.

    And the photos couples regret forgetting are almost never the dramatic ones – they’re usually the moments that seemed too ordinary to capture at the time.

    ALSO SEE: 12 South African wedding photographers every couple should know 

    12 South African wedding photographers every couple should know

    Featured image: Isaac Naph / Pexels