10 June 2026 · Drone · Aerial Photography · Spring Weddings · Real Weddings
Drone Wedding Photography: Coral & Barry’s Spring Wedding From Above
Aerial photographs change how a wedding gallery feels. Suddenly you see the whole day in its landscape. Inside Coral & Barry’s spring wedding, and how I plan drone coverage safely at UK venues.

There is a moment in most wedding galleries where the perspective suddenly lifts, and everyone who sees the album stops scrolling. Coral & Barry’s spring wedding had several of those: aerial frames that place the couple, their guests and the venue inside the landscape of the day.
Their gallery came back at 238 edited photographs, anchored by those views from above and filled out with the heartfelt, documentary moments in between.
Why aerial coverage earns its place
Ground-level photographs tell you what the day felt like. Aerial photographs tell you where it happened. The establishing shot of the venue, the full wedding party from above, the couple alone in open ground: these are images you simply cannot make any other way.
Spring is a particularly good season for it. Soft light, fresh greens, and weather that occasionally cooperates.

How I plan drone coverage
Flying at a wedding is a planning job before it is a creative one. For every booking I check the airspace around the venue in advance, watch the weather right up to the day, and time flights so they never interrupt the moments that matter. You will never miss a ceremony because a drone was in the air.
Drone footage and aerial photography are included across my wedding packages, so it is not an upsell. It is part of how I cover a day whenever the venue and conditions allow.

Planning a spring wedding?
If your venue has grounds worth seeing from above, and most do, let’s talk about what aerial coverage could look like for your day. You can check my availability and current packages, or just send your date through the contact page.
