Cycladic Light
We shoot for the island — bright whites, long shadows, soft rose evenings — with a colour palette built for Santorini's atmosphere.

Santorini — Cyclades — Greece
Caldera light. Whitewashed stone. Cinematic quiet. Editorial wedding photography for couples marrying in Santorini.
Santorini gives you a kind of light you cannot rehearse — hard midday whites, a long soft golden hour, then a lilac dusk that lasts twenty minutes and never repeats. Our work on the island leans into that atmosphere. We photograph caldera ceremonies in Imerovigli, sunset vows in Oia, private villa weddings in Megalochori, and receptions along the cliff edge.
We travel from Athens with a small, senior team, arrive a day early, and quietly walk your venue. On the day itself we work in the background — never blocking guests, never pulling you out of the moment — while creating imagery that reads like a wedding editorial rather than a set of snapshots.
How we work
We shoot for the island — bright whites, long shadows, soft rose evenings — with a colour palette built for Santorini's atmosphere.
Terraces are narrow. We travel light, work quietly and never break the spell of your ceremony to stage a photograph.
Based in Athens, fully mobile across the Cyclades. Travel is included in our destination collections.

We accept a small number of weddings in Santorini each year. Every enquiry is answered personally, usually within one working day.
Start a conversationFrequently asked
Our destination collections include travel from Athens and one night of accommodation. Longer stays or multi-day events are quoted individually.
For caldera-facing venues we recommend a ceremony one hour before local sunset. This gives you the vows in golden light and a full magic-hour portrait window immediately after.
Yes. Two- and three-day coverage across a welcome dinner, ceremony and farewell brunch is common for destination weddings on the island.
Continue exploring
Begin your story with LAMINÉ.
Personal replies. Small commission list. Every enquiry answered by the founding photographer.