Yarra Valley Wedding Films
Cinematic wedding films across the Yarra Valley
The Yarra Valley runs east of Melbourne in long, slow folds — vineyards stitched together by quiet country roads, with the Dandenongs rising in the distance. For a region so close to the city, it has a habit of feeling further away than it is. That distance shows up in how weddings unfold here. There's more breathing room. The day moves at the land's pace.
We've spent more time filming in the Yarra Valley than almost any other region in Victoria. The light here is what brings us back. Through autumn especially, the afternoon light pours through the vines and onto sandstone, and we time everything around it — ceremonies, portraits, the last shot of the reception before the band starts. Stones of the Yarra Valley has its own version of this. Coombe has another. Each venue holds the light differently.
The valley's wedding culture has grown more sophisticated every year. Couples choosing the Yarra Valley now expect a level of craft from every vendor — not just the venues but the florists, the photographers, the bands. Our films sit inside that ecosystem. We arrive at six in the morning and leave after the last guest has gone, and what stays with us afterward is always the quiet middle of the day — the hour before the ceremony when nobody's looking yet, and the sun is still climbing.
If you're planning a wedding in the Yarra Valley, you'll likely already know which venue you want. From there, the question becomes how to film it without breaking the spell. That's the work we're built for.
Stones of the Yarra Valley
The valley's most-filmed venue, with a hilltop chapel, vine-side ceremony lawn, and a long restaurant looking over the rows. We've shot ceremonies in every season here, and the light still surprises us. Khya and Sam's wedding here is in our films collection.
Coombe Yarra Valley
Dame Nellie Melba's former estate — sandstone, formal gardens, Italianate restraint. Coombe weddings feel ceremonial in the original sense of the word. Sally and Sam's wedding at Coombe is in our films collection.
Acacia Ridge
A working winery with a glasshouse reception space and uninterrupted valley views. The architecture stays out of the way of the landscape, which is exactly what some couples want.
Private estates throughout the valley
Some of our favourite Yarra Valley weddings happen on properties most people will never see — family vineyards, restored homesteads, working farms with cellar doors. We've filmed across them all and our films collection still doesn't capture every one.
Recent films
The Yarra Valley sits about an hour east of Melbourne by car, and we travel from our base in the city for every wedding. Most valley weddings run a longer ceremony-to-reception transition than city weddings — the venues hold both spaces on the same property, and we plan coverage around that rhythm, with extra time built in for portraits in the vines or among the old buildings on whichever estate you've chosen.
Melbourne CBD Mornington Peninsula Macedon Ranges Daylesford & Hepburn Springs Bellarine Peninsula High Country
Frequently asked
Do you travel to the Yarra Valley for weddings?
Yes. We're Melbourne-based and film throughout the Yarra Valley regularly, it's one of the regions we shoot most. Travel to the valley is quoted per wedding depending on the venue and the day's schedule, and we'll include it in your proposal so there are no surprises.
Which Yarra Valley venues have you filmed at?
We've filmed extensively across the valley, including Stones of the Yarra Valley, Coombe Yarra Valley, and Acacia Ridge, as well as private estates and family vineyards throughout the region. If you've chosen a venue we haven't shot before, that's never a problem, we scout and plan for every wedding regardless.
What time do you arrive for a Yarra Valley wedding?
We typically arrive early, often around six in the morning, and stay until after the last guest has gone. Valley weddings tend to run a longer ceremony-to-reception rhythm than city weddings, and we build our coverage around that, with time set aside for portraits in the vines and the quiet hour before the ceremony.
How far in advance should we book?
We take on a limited number of weddings each year so every film gets the attention it deserves. Most couples reach out twelve to eighteen months ahead, though we'd always encourage you to get in touch as early as you can, especially for peak-season dates.
When will we receive our wedding film?
Delivery timelines are confirmed in your proposal. We'll always give you a clear timeframe up front and keep you updated through the edit.