ANALOGUE WEDDING PHOTOGRAPHY
Analogue wedding photography for couples who want something slower, more intentional and full of character. I photograph weddings with a documentary approach, using film alongside digital to create images that feel tactile, honest and timeless.
Based in Oxfordshire, I photograph weddings across Oxford, the Cotswolds, London and beyond.
FILM WEDDING PHOTOGRAPHY WITH DEPTH, TEXTURE AND FEELING
There is a reason film still matters. It sees light differently. It softens what digital can make too perfect. It adds texture, depth and a sense of memory that suits weddings beautifully.
This is not about nostalgia for the sake of it. It is about making photographs that feel lived in, emotionally grounded and distinct from the endless stream of polished digital images couples see every day.
My approach stays documentary-led. I do not stage moments heavily or turn film into a gimmick. I use it where it adds something real, whether that is during quiet morning preparations, portraits with space to breathe, or small in-between moments that deserve a different kind of attention.
WHAT ANALOGUE WEDDING PHOTOGRAPHY FEELS LIKE
Analogue wedding photography has a different pace. It asks for care. It rewards observation. Each frame matters, and that changes the way a wedding is photographed.
The result is often softer, richer and more human. Skin tones feel natural. Highlights roll off gently. Grain adds atmosphere. The photographs feel less manufactured and more like memories.
For couples drawn to documentary wedding photography, film can be a strong fit. It works especially well when you want your images to feel personal, artistic and a little less obvious.

MY APPROACH TO FILM ON A WEDDING DAY
I photograph weddings in a calm, unobtrusive way, staying close enough to observe what matters without turning the day into a production. Film is part of that approach, not a separate performance.
I use analogue photography selectively and with purpose, alongside digital coverage. That means you still get the reliability and completeness needed for a wedding day, with film adding a more textured and distinctive layer to the final story.
This suits couples who care about atmosphere, subtle emotion and photographs that do not feel overworked. It is less about trends, and more about presence, light and instinct.
ANALOGUE WEDDING PHOTOGRAPHER IN OXFORD, THE COTSWOLDS AND LONDON
I photograph analogue and film-inspired wedding coverage across Oxford & Oxfordshire, the Cotswolds and London weddings. These places all offer something different, and film responds beautifully to each of them.
In Oxford, it works well with historic architecture, colleges and quiet city moments. In the Cotswolds, film suits soft countryside light, stone venues and relaxed celebrations. In London, it brings depth and character to modern, editorial and city-led weddings.
Wherever you are getting married, the aim stays the same. To create photographs that feel natural, emotionally true and visually lasting.
WHO THIS IS FOR
This is for couples who want wedding photography with character. Couples who value how a photograph feels, not just how sharp it is. Couples who are drawn to documentary coverage, but also want a layer of craft and texture that film brings.
If you like the idea of photographs that feel timeless rather than trend-led, analogue wedding photography may be the right fit.
FILM AS PART OF A COMPLETE WEDDING STORY
Film works best when it is part of a wider story, not treated as a novelty add-on. I use it to bring balance, warmth and variation to a wedding gallery, while keeping the full day covered with consistency and intent.
The final collection feels cohesive, not split between two styles. You get the honesty and responsiveness of documentary wedding photography, with analogue frames woven through it in a way that feels natural and considered.
LOOKING FOR AN ANALOGUE WEDDING PHOTOGRAPHER?
If you are planning a wedding in Oxford, Oxfordshire, the Cotswolds or London and want photography that feels natural, tactile and full of atmosphere, I would love to hear more.
