A Muslim wedding in Melbourne has a lot of moving parts. From the Nikah ceremony to the Walima reception, each event has its own requirements, its own atmosphere, and its own photography challenges.
After covering dozens of Nikkah ceremonies and Walima receptions across Melbourne, here’s everything couples need to know before the day.
Start With a Realistic Timeline
A Muslim wedding typically runs across one or two days:
- Nikkah day — bridal prep (2-3 hours), groom prep (1 hour), Nikkah ceremony (1-2 hours), couple portraits (45-60 minutes)
- Walima day — setup (2-3 hours before guests), reception (4-5 hours coverage)
The Nikah Ceremony — Getting the Setup Right
The Nikah is an intimate ceremony. It typically takes place in a home, a function centre, or a mosque — and each setting has different photography considerations.
Lighting at the Nikah
Many Nikah ceremonies happen in spaces with mixed or challenging lighting — warm tungsten from chandeliers, cool natural light from windows, and sometimes coloured uplighting from the decorator. This mix creates unpredictable colour casts that a less experienced photographer won’t know how to manage.
Ask your photographer specifically about their approach to mixed lighting. It’s a technical skill that separates experienced wedding photographers from those who are learning on your day.
The Qubool Hai Moment
This is the centrepiece of the Nikah — the three acceptances, the witnesses, the signing. It happens quickly and it happens once. Your photographer needs to be positioned before it begins, not repositioning when it starts.
We always brief on the exact sequence with the Imam or Qazi before the ceremony begins so we know precisely where to be and when.
Couple Portraits After the Nikah
Schedule a minimum of 45-60 minutes for couple portraits immediately after the Nikah, while the bride’s makeup and outfit are at their best. This is often the only dedicated portrait time in the entire wedding — don’t let it get compressed by a running-late schedule.
The Walima Reception
DJ and Energy
The Walima is a celebration — music, dancing, family. Book a DJ who understands South Asian and Arabic music and can read the room between both. A DJ who only knows one style will create dead patches during the evening.
Decoration and Your Outfits
The most common mistake at Walima receptions: outfit colours that compete with or disappear into the decoration scheme. Discuss your outfit colours with your decorator before finalising the stage and table colours. Your outfits should stand out from the background — not blend into it.
Things to Never Skip
- A proper couple portrait session — at both the Nikah and Walima if possible
- Briefing your photographer on the Nikah sequence with the Imam before the day
- A written timeline shared with all vendors at least one week before
- Testing your DJ’s playlist at the venue before the reception begins
Written by
Rattan — Rav Cine Captures
7+ years · 150+ South Asian weddings · Melbourne & Sydney
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