Do I Need a Wedding Videographer? An Honest Guide

I want to start by acknowledging something: I am probably the least impartial person in the world to answer this question. I'm a wedding videographer. Of course I think you should have a wedding videographer.

But bear with me - because the reason I believe it so strongly has nothing to do with wanting the work. It's because of what I hear, almost every single time I meet a new couple. One of two things:

“Oh, I wish I'd had my wedding filmed. It was my biggest regret.”

Or: “It was the best thing we spent our money on.”

I always feel like I'm selling it when I say this, and I'm aware of how that sounds. But I genuinely believe every couple should have one - not because I want people to pay me to do it, but because I've seen what it means to the couples who have it, and I've heard what it means to the people who didn't.

Your day goes faster than you think

People spend a lot of money on their wedding. They always have a photographer. But some don't budget for a film, or they decide against it - and the reason I think that's worth reconsidering is simple: the day flies by.

You will not be able to take it all in on the day itself. Nobody does. You're in the middle of it - greeting people, having photos, trying to eat, trying to be present in a hundred conversations at once. What a film does is give you the day back, properly, when you're ready to actually sit down and watch it.

I'm there from bridal prep right through to around an hour after the first dance - usually around 10 hours. In that time I capture everything: the sound of guests mingling outside the church, the laughs, the cheers, the speeches, the quiet moments between the two of you that even you didn't notice were happening. All of it put together with a carefully chosen soundtrack and edited so it looks like a cinematic film. That's what you get to watch afterwards.

What photographs can't do

A great photographer is irreplaceable and I'd never tell you otherwise - I've worked alongside some of my closest friends who are photographers and the work they produce is extraordinary. But photographs don't capture sound.

They can't capture the way your partner's voice sounds when they read their vows. They can't hold the laughter when the best man's speech goes brilliantly off-script. They can't play back your dad's voice, or the toast from a friend who flew in from the other side of the world, or the moment everyone erupted when the first dance started. A film does all of those things - and in my experience, it's those sounds and moments that people find most affecting when they watch it back.

‘I’m worried I’ll feel awkward on camera’

This is probably the most common concern I hear - and honestly, it's usually the reason couples who regret not booking a videographer give when they explain why they didn't.

Gone are the days of a giant shoulder-mounted camera following you around all day. I have two very compact but incredibly capable cinema cameras, and I stay in the background for the majority of the day - interacting just enough to enjoy the day with your guests, but not drawing attention to what I'm filming. I've had so many couples tell me they were shocked when they saw moments in their film that they had no idea I'd captured. That's the aim.

I take maybe 5 to 10 minutes of your time during the day - usually around the same time as the photographer - where I might ask for a couple of posed shots. Everything else is natural. If you've watched wedding films that felt forced or cringeworthy - the staged walks, the 'look at each other now' moments - that's a stylistic choice, not how it has to be. Watch a filmmaker's work before you book them, and if their films feel authentic and real, that's how your day will be filmed.

‘We already have a photographer - isn’t that enough?’

They do completely different jobs. A photographer freezes a moment. A film unfolds it. Both are valuable, and in my experience working alongside photographers day after day, the two things complement each other rather than overlap.

Most couples sit down to watch their wedding film for the first time a few weeks after the day - once the adrenaline has settled and real life has resumed. Almost every couple I've heard from describes it as unexpectedly emotional. It gives them back something they couldn't fully absorb on the day itself. That's what the film is for.

‘We can’t afford it’

This is the most honest objection and I respect it completely. What I'd say is this: to book, I only require a 20% deposit. You don't have to pay in full until two months before the wedding, and you can split payments into two or three instalments if that helps. I try to make it as manageable as possible.

I also keep my prices as low as I can for the amount of work involved - the hours at your wedding, the travel, the meeting beforehand, and then the editing, which I spend hours and hours on for every single film. I'm a perfectionist and I don't rush anyone's film. I won't offer discounts because doing so would mean cutting corners somewhere, and I don't want to do that.

If budget is genuinely tight, I'd just ask you to honestly consider what you're comparing. The flowers will fade. The favours will be forgotten. The film is the one thing that actually gives you the day back, for the rest of your lives. I've heard 'it was the best thing we spent our money on' more times than I can count. I've never once heard the opposite from someone who had one.

What happens after the wedding?

I try to get a 1-2 minute trailer to you as quickly as possible after the wedding - usually within three weeks - delivered via a private Vimeo link. The full film follows within 2-3 months. Once both are ready, I package everything up and send it via a link that looks like your own personal Netflix page, where you can stream it and download all the files.

When it genuinely might not be for you

I said I'd be honest, so here it is. If your wedding is very small and completely informal - a registry office ceremony with a handful of guests and no speeches - a full day of coverage might be more than you need. If budget absolutely doesn't allow for it and something else matters more to you, that's a completely valid decision. A great wedding doesn't require a film.

But if there's any part of you that thinks you might feel differently in a few years' time - it's worth at least having the conversation.

About Ben

I'm Ben - a cinematic, documentary wedding videographer based in Salisbury, Wiltshire. I've been doing this for 10 years and I still find it genuinely hard to believe how lucky I am to do it. I film weddings across Wiltshire, Hampshire, Dorset, and beyond - and internationally, including Spain and Italy.

My whole approach is built around being a calm, discreet presence - someone your guests barely notice is there - while capturing everything that makes your day feel like yours. If you'd like to see my work or have a conversation about what I do, I'd love to hear from you.

My Favourite Wedding Venues: An Honest Guide from a Wedding Videographer

After ten years of filming weddings across Wiltshire, Hampshire, Dorset, and Berkshire, I've had the privilege of working at some genuinely extraordinary venues. Every filmmaker has a list - the places they'd recommend without hesitation, the ones they find themselves thinking about between weddings. These are mine.

Every venue below is somewhere I've actually filmed. That matters, because what looks beautiful in a brochure doesn't always translate to film - and what doesn't photograph spectacularly can produce some of the most compelling footage I've ever shot. These are the venues where I know from experience that the day, and the film, will be outstanding.

Syrencot, near Amesbury, Wiltshire

Syrencot sits just five miles from Stonehenge, and there's something fitting about that - it's a venue with a real sense of place and history, but one that's been reimagined with extraordinary care. The Georgian manor house, the contemporary barn, the glasshouse ceremony space, and the five acres of walled gardens all combine to give couples something that feels simultaneously rooted in the English countryside and genuinely contemporary.

The glasshouse is where I always feel the light most acutely at Syrencot - it wraps around the ceremony from every angle and creates the kind of natural, unforced beauty that no amount of artificial lighting can replicate. The walled garden has an intimacy that makes people relax and let their guard down, and those are the moments I'm always looking for. I love Syrencot and has filmed there 30+ times since it opened in 2019. I shot their third ever wedding and have continued to go back since.

Best for: couples who want exclusive use, natural light, and a venue with genuine character

Came House, near Dorchester, Dorset

Came House is one of the finest Georgian houses in Dorset - a beautiful Grade I listed manor set within its own parkland just outside Dorchester. The combination of the house, the church within the grounds (one of the most charming small churches you'll find anywhere in the south of England), and the surrounding Dorset landscape gives weddings here a quality that's genuinely hard to define. Stately, but warm. Grand, but intimate.

Filming here, I'm always drawn to the relationship between the house and the landscape. The parkland views, the quality of light on the stone facade in the afternoon - these are the things that make Came House feel like somewhere that exists slightly outside ordinary time. It's a venue for couples who want something that feels properly, quietly extraordinary. Came House is truly one of my favourite places to film in the world, the team there (Bellissimo Weddings), the owners, the staff & the stunning venue truly make it one of the best places to visit.

Best for: couples who love Georgian architecture, Dorset countryside, weddings with real ceremony and elegance

Avington Park, near Winchester, Hampshire

Avington Park is one of Hampshire's most remarkable wedding venues - a Grade I listed baroque mansion with origins stretching back to 961 AD, set within its own parkland on the banks of the River Itchen. King Charles II used Avington as a private retreat; the Brydges family remodelled it in the 1670s into the stunning house that stands today, with its painted state rooms, magnificent orangery, and walled rose garden.

The quality of light at Avington is exceptional - the River Itchen glitters through the grounds, the parkland catches the late afternoon sun in a way I rarely see elsewhere, and the painted interiors of the house provide an extraordinary backdrop for ceremony footage. It's a venue that rewards patience: the longer you spend in it, the more beautiful it becomes. Avington Park is gorgeous & one of my favourite places to go to - I got engaged here myself recently too so I have even stronger connection to it than I already did.

Best for: couples who want genuine history and grandeur, intimate weddings, exceptional natural light

Pylewell Park, near Lymington, Hampshire

Pylewell Park sits on the edge of the New Forest, overlooking the Solent and the Isle of Wight - and that view alone is worth the journey. This beautiful private estate, with its Georgian mansion, converted barn, and direct access to the Solent shore, offers something genuinely rare: a wedding venue where the sea is part of the day.

What strikes me every time I film at Pylewell is the scale of the place - not in a grand, intimidating way, but in the sense that there's always somewhere new to discover. The walled kitchen garden, the woodland paths, the shoreline at golden hour. The Isle of Wight in the background at sunset produces some of the most beautiful footage I have from any venue in my portfolio.

Best for: couples who love the coast and countryside together, those who want exclusive use with genuine estate grounds

Chalk Barn, Rushall, Wiltshire

Chalk Barn is unlike any other venue on this list - a contemporary, award-winning barn perched on the crest of a hill within 5,000 acres of organic farmland, with floor-to-ceiling windows that frame what I genuinely believe is the finest view of the Wiltshire countryside from any wedding venue in the county.

The architecture is bold and considered: vaulted timber-clad ceilings, an infinity lawn that drops away to the downland below, and a sustainability ethos that's built into everything rather than bolted on. Filming here, I'm always conscious of how the landscape becomes part of the wedding itself - it's not a backdrop, it's a participant. The 48-hour exclusive use means there's always time for the day to breathe, and some of my favourite footage has come from the evening light across those hills.

Best for: design-conscious couples, those who want the Wiltshire landscape front and centre, summer and golden-hour light

Wasing Park, near Aldermaston, Berkshire

Wasing Park is one of those estates that makes you genuinely understand why England does this better than anywhere else in the world. A 2,500-acre private estate in the West Berkshire countryside - with a stunning Georgian mansion, a walled garden, a lake with a boathouse, and miles of woodland and parkland - it's a venue of extraordinary breadth and quality.

What I love about filming at Wasing is the sheer variety of settings across a single day. The lake and boathouse in the morning light, the formality of the walled garden for portraits, the warm stone of the house in the evening, the parkland at golden hour - every hour offers something different, and the size of the estate means there's always somewhere quiet to find. It's a venue that rewards a documentary approach to filming.

Best for: couples who want a genuine private estate, larger weddings, couples who love the idea of a full weekend in extraordinary surroundings

Hannah & Isaac's Wedding at The Grange, Northington, Hampshire

I had the absolute privilege of filming the beautiful wedding of Hannah and Isaac at The Grange in Northington, Hampshire.

As a wedding videographer, I have been to countless venues throughout the UK, but The Grange truly stands out as a stunning location for any couple's special day. Its elegant and historic charm provides the perfect backdrop for a memorable wedding. The lush greenery and picturesque views at The Grange offer the ideal setting for capturing the perfect shots & the quirks of the inside & wall textures are beautiful.

Hannah and Isaac's wedding was a true celebration of love, and I was honored to be a part of it. Their day was full of laughter, joy, and pure happiness. From the vibrant suits and funky style of the wedding party to the stunning floral arrangements and decor, every detail was carefully planned and executed flawlessly.

Working with Angela Ward-Brown was an absolute joy, as always. Angela is an incredibly talented photographer who no matter how many times I work with her literally blows me away with her photos.

As a wedding videographer, my goal is to capture every precious moment and emotion of a couple's wedding day, creating a timeless piece of art that they can treasure forever. Hannah and Isaac's special day really stands out as one of the most enjoyable days I can ever remember filming, and I am so grateful to have been able to capture their love story on film.

My aim as a wedding videographer is to always tailor the films to each couple. I think the trailer above shows the most perfect example of how I do that and how I adapt my style to suit each couple. The colours, funkiness & joy of the video hopefully captures their wedding perfectly.

Laura & Andy's Wedding at Pylewell Park, Lymington Hampshire

On April 8th, 2023, I had the pleasure of filming the beautiful wedding of Laura and Andy at the stunning Pylewell Park in Lymington, Hampshire. As a wedding videographer, it's always a joy to capture the love and happiness of a couple on their special day, and this wedding was no exception.

Pylewell Park provided a stunning backdrop for the ceremony, with its beautiful gardens and picturesque lake. The ceremony itself was held in a beautiful pavilion, which offered the perfect setting for Laura and Andy to exchange their vows. The venue is truly one of the most beautiful locations I've had the pleasure of filming a wedding at, and it was a delight to capture the essence of the place in my videography.

Working alongside Nudo Bloom, who provided the flowers for the wedding, was an absolute pleasure. Their stunning floral arrangements were the perfect complement to the natural beauty of the venue, and they really brought the whole event to life. The colors and fragrances of the flowers were a sight to behold, and I was grateful to have the opportunity to capture their beauty on film.

I also had the privilege of working with Romy Lawrence Photography, who captured some truly stunning shots of the couple throughout the day. Her ability to capture the perfect moment was truly remarkable, it was the second time we have worked together and it is always such a joy.

But ultimately, the stars of the day were Laura and Andy themselves. Their love for each other was palpable, and it was a joy to see them surrounded by their friends and family as they began their journey together as husband and wife. It was an honor to capture their special day on film, and I'm proud to have been a part of it.

In conclusion, the wedding of Laura and Andy at Pylewell Park in Lymington, Hampshire was a beautiful event that I was honored to capture on film. The natural beauty of the venue, the stunning floral arrangements by Nudo Bloom, and the perfect moments captured by Romy Lawrence Photography all came together to create a truly magical day. And of course, the love and happiness of Laura and Andy themselves was the true highlight of the day. I'm grateful for the opportunity to have been a part of it all.

Amber & Bens Wedding at Rockbeare Manor in Devon

Amber & Ben - Rockbeare Manor, Devon

I had the huge honor of filming Amber & Ben’s wedding on February 10th, 2023. Amber and Ben tied the knot at the stunning Rockbeare Manor in Devon, and I was lucky enough to capture their special day on video. I went to school with Ben and I am always delighted when old friends book me as their wedding videographer. It makes the day extra special!

Rockbeare Manor is an absolutely breathtaking venue for weddings, with its elegant decor and picturesque surroundings. Amber and Ben's wedding was no exception, with every detail carefully thought out and beautifully executed. The day was filled with love, laughter, and happy tears as Amber and Ben exchanged vows and celebrated with their family and friends. Including Ben & his groomsmen arriving in on a helicopter!

As the videographer, I was there to capture every moment, from the ceremony to the speeches and the lively dance-floor. All my films are tailored to each individual couple and their wedding day, and Amber and Ben's was no exception. Having filmed both of Ben’s best man’s weddings & making a couple of epic films for them I felt like I needed to take Amber & Ben’s to another level. So I had a lot of fun editing this one & incorporating some shots from their engagement video into the film as well.

Whether you're planning a wedding at Rockbeare Manor or another stunning venue in the UK I would love to chat about filming your day! Contact me today to learn more about my wedding videography services and we can book in a chat. I can't wait to help you capture the magic of your wedding day!