wedding timeline

First Look or No First Look? What San Diego Couples Should Know

There's a moment early in wedding planning when almost every couple asks the same question: should we do a first look, or wait until the aisle?

There's no wrong answer — but after years of designing weddings across San Diego, we've seen firsthand how a well-planned first look can completely change the feel of a wedding day. Not just the photos. The whole experience.

More Time, Less Rush

A traditional timeline saves everything — first look included — for after the ceremony. That means portraits, family photos, and wedding party shots all get squeezed into the same narrow window as cocktail hour. Guests are waiting. The light is shifting. And you're rushing through some of the most meaningful photos of the day.

A first look flips that. Romantic portraits and even family formals can happen before the ceremony, which means:

  • More breathing room in your timeline

  • Genuine time with guests during cocktail hour, instead of missing it entirely

  • Less pressure to "perform" for photos right after an emotional ceremony

  • A buffer if hair, makeup, or transportation runs behind

A Quiet Moment, Just for You

Beyond logistics, there's something a first look gives couples that nothing else on the day can: privacy. For a few minutes, it's just the two of you — no guests watching, no ceremony nerves, no audience. Just each other.

It's often the moment couples describe afterward as the most them part of the entire day.

Finding the Right Photography Style for Your Day

Just as important as when you take portraits is how they're captured — and that comes down to your photographer's style.

Some photographers lean bright and airy. Others go documentary and candid. One of our favorite collaborators, Daniel Bini of Indigo West Photography, works in a candid, editorial storytelling style — images that feel more like a story unfolding than a posed portrait.

Every couple has a unique story, and I’m here to make sure yours is told authentically through every frame. Often the best wedding photos happen when the couple forgets I’m even there! I love seeing that real magic unfold

That kind of style pairs especially well with a first look, since it gives him time to work unhurried — chasing light, finding real interaction, rather than rushing a formulaic pose list between the ceremony and reception.

The Takeaway

A first look isn't about giving something up — it's about giving yourselves more. More time with guests. More privacy as a couple. More room for your photographer to actually do their best work.

If you're building your wedding day timeline and want help figuring out where a first look fits (or whether it's right for you at all), that's exactly the kind of planning we love digging into. And if moody, editorial photography is the vibe you're after, Daniel is who we'd send you to.

Planning your San Diego wedding? Get in touch — we'd love to help design a day, and a timeline, that feels entirely yours.