Why wedding family photos still matter
Trends come and go—candid coverage, golden-hour portraits, drone flyovers—but the images couples and families return to, years later, are almost always the formal family photos.
They may not feel like the most glamorous part of the day, and nobody lists “family formals” as their favourite moment. Yet these are the photos that end up framed on parents’ walls, shared in group chats when a grandparent passes, and pulled out at Christmas for decades. After delivering more than 500 Queensland weddings, that pattern holds every single time.
The good news: family photos do not have to be painful. With a little planning, you can move through them quickly, calmly, and with genuine smiles instead of forced ones.
Building your shot list
A written shot list is the single most useful thing you can bring to your family photo session. It sounds obvious, but around half the couples we work with arrive without one, and it always costs time and energy.
Start by listing the combinations that matter most to each of you. The essentials usually look something like this:
- Couple with bride’s parents
- Couple with groom’s parents
- Couple with both sets of parents together
- Couple with bride’s siblings
- Couple with groom’s siblings
- Couple with grandparents (each side)
- Couple with full immediate family (each side)
From there, add close aunts, uncles, godparents, or cousins you want included. The key is to be specific. “All the cousins” is not a shot list entry. “Couple with Aunt Karen’s family” is.
We find that 15–20 combinations is the sweet spot: enough to cover everyone important, short enough to keep the energy up.
Managing large families
Queensland weddings often bring together big, extended families, and when both sides are large, logistics can get complicated quickly.
Nominate a family wrangler on each side. This is someone who:
- Knows everyone by name
- Understands who is related to whom
- Is comfortable calling out across a courtyard
Your photographer, no matter how experienced, cannot identify your second cousin’s partner in a crowd of 150 people. A wrangler can.
We also recommend starting with the largest group first. Get everyone together for the big extended-family shot, then progressively release people as you work down to smaller groupings. This is far more efficient than building up from small groups, because you spend less time calling people back.
If you have blended families or complex dynamics, flag that for your photographer beforehand. We have worked through every configuration you can imagine, and a quick heads-up lets us handle it with sensitivity rather than stumbling into awkward moments on the day.
Getting the timing right
Timing is where family photos most often fall apart. Couples underestimate how long the session will take, then feel rushed or start cutting combinations from the list on the fly.
For a list of 15–20 groupings, allow 20–30 minutes. If your venue requires walking between locations, or if either family is particularly large, push that closer to 40 minutes.
The ideal window is straight after the ceremony:
- Everyone is already in one place
- The emotion is fresh
- You avoid the headache of rounding people up later
At many Queensland ceremony venues—from hinterland properties to beachfront locations—there is usually a shaded area nearby that works perfectly.
If your ceremony and reception are at different venues, consider doing family photos at the ceremony location before anyone leaves. Once guests start driving to the reception, getting specific family members back together becomes much harder.
Common mistakes we see
After hundreds of weddings, certain patterns keep repeating. Here are the ones to avoid:
No list at all
This leads to someone standing in front of the group asking, “Who else do we need?” while guests drift away. It almost always results in a missed combination that someone notices weeks later.
Too many groupings
A list of 40 combinations will take well over an hour and will test everyone’s patience. Be ruthless about what truly matters.
Not briefing the family
If your parents and siblings know in advance that they need to stay nearby after the ceremony for 20 minutes of photos, they will. If they don’t, they’ll head straight to the bar and your wrangler will spend ten minutes tracking them down.
Skipping grandparents
These photos become irreplaceable. If grandparents are present and able, prioritise them early in the session so they can sit down sooner.
Relying on your photographer to know everyone
Even with a detailed list, we still need someone on the ground who can point and say, “That’s Uncle Steve, he’s behind the tree.” It makes a bigger difference than you’d think.
Making it enjoyable
The secret to great family photos is not complicated lighting or a postcard-perfect backdrop. It is speed and warmth.
When the session moves quickly, people stay engaged. When there’s a bit of laughter between shots, the smiles look real.
We keep light conversation going, give clear and simple directions, and aim to get each grouping done in under a minute. The less time people spend standing and waiting, the better the photos turn out.
One last suggestion: once the formal list is done, give yourselves a moment with just your parents. No cousins, no bridal party—just the people who raised you. Those quiet, slightly emotional frames are often the ones that mean the most when you look back on the day.