Let me tell you about Harpreet.
He woke up the morning of their pre-wedding shoot straight into a cold shower. The night before had been a good one. Too good. He was not exactly radiating confidence when I pulled up outside their place in Titirangi at sunrise.
Arshdeep was ready. Harpreet was alive. Barely.
And yet by the time we wrapped at Karekare that morning, these two had produced some of the most natural, joyful, cinematic frames I’ve ever captured. Not because they were comfortable in front of a camera. Because they forgot the camera was there. That is the whole job.

You Are Not the Problem
Almost every couple I work with says some version of the same thing before their shoot. “We are not photogenic.” “We are so awkward in photos.” “We never know what to do with our hands.”
I hear this constantly. And I want to be direct with you: that feeling is not a you problem. It is a photographer problem. When people feel stiff and awkward in photos, it’s because they were made to feel that way — told where to stand, told to smile, told to hold a pose while someone counted down. That is not photography. That is a school portrait.

The Shoot Starts in the Car
With Arshdeep and Harpreet, the session did not start when I lifted my camera. It started the moment I picked them up.
We talked. We laughed about Harpreet’s morning. We drove through the Waitakere Ranges as the light was just starting to come through the trees. By the time we arrived at Karekare they were not nervous clients. They were just two people who had been chatting with their photographer for 40 minutes. That is intentional. The comfort you feel in front of the camera is built before the camera ever comes out.

Movement Over Posing
I never say “stand here and smile.” What I do instead is give people something to do. Walk toward me. Walk away. Hold her hand and just start moving. Whisper something in her ear. Look at that waterfall.
When people are moving, when they have a task or a direction or something to react to, they stop thinking about the camera. That is when the real expressions come out. That is when the images go from looking like photos to feeling like memories.

The Moment They Saw Their Photos
About an hour into the shoot I turned my camera around and showed Arshdeep and Harpreet what we had captured so far. Harpreet’s face changed completely.
That moment happens on almost every shoot I do. People are so convinced they are bad at this, so certain the photos will be awkward and forced, that when they see genuine emotion and real beauty staring back at them they cannot quite believe it. That shift in confidence changes the rest of the shoot entirely. The last hour at Karekare was effortless.

A Sunrise Session at Karekare — One of Auckland’s Best Shoot Locations
Arshdeep and Harpreet traveled from New Plymouth specifically for this pre-wedding shoot and their upcoming wedding in Auckland. They chose Karekare for good reason. The waterfall, the black sand, the dramatic cliffs, the way the morning light hits the headlands as the sun comes up. It is one of the most cinematic locations in New Zealand for an engagement or pre-wedding shoot.
For couples who want natural, emotional, story-driven photography, locations like this do half the work. There is nowhere to hide, nothing to be self-conscious about. The landscape takes over and suddenly two people who hate photos are standing in the middle of something extraordinary.

Your Engagement Shoot Is Practice for Your Wedding Day
One of the biggest reasons we encourage couples to do a pre-wedding shoot before their wedding day is exactly this. By the time your wedding comes around you have already been through it with us. You know how we work. You know that we are not going to make you do anything uncomfortable. You know what it feels like to see yourself in photos the way you actually are.
Arshdeep and Harpreet arrived at Karekare nervous. They left with photos that made them laugh, cry a little, and send me a voice note I will not forget.

Frequently Asked Questions About Pre-Wedding Shoots in Auckland
Where do you shoot?
Across Auckland and New Zealand. Popular locations include Karekare, Piha, Muriwai, Bethells Beach, the Waitakere Ranges, and various urban and vineyard settings. We’ll suggest locations based on your style and the time of year.
How long does a pre-wedding shoot take?
Typically 1.5 to 2 hours. Enough time to warm up, explore the location, and capture a variety of natural moments without it feeling like a marathon.
Is a pre-wedding shoot necessary before our wedding day?
Not mandatory — but almost every couple who does one tells us it was one of the best decisions they made. It removes the camera-shyness before the day that actually matters. When your wedding comes around, we’re not strangers and you’re not performing.
What if the weather is bad?
We reschedule. Auckland weather is what it is. We always have a backup date and won’t push you through a session in conditions that won’t give you good results.
Ready to Feel Good in Front of the Camera?
If you’ve been putting off booking a photographer because you hate how you look in photos, stop waiting. You don’t need to be photogenic. You don’t need experience. You just need the right person behind the camera.
View our packages — pre-wedding shoots are available as an add-on or included in select packages. Or get in touch and we’ll talk through what works best for your day.
Limited dates available
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If this sounds like the kind of coverage you want for your day, grab a 20-minute vision call with Karan. No pressure, no hard sell.


