
There are weddings that go exactly to plan. And then there are the ones where the rain comes in sideways off the lake, the wind catches the veil, and the couple just laughs and gets on the boat anyway.
This was one of those weddings. And it was one of the most beautiful days I have photographed.
The day began at Valkeala kirkko, a classic Finnish white church that does something remarkable to light even on a grey day. The ceremony was everything a Finnish wedding ceremony should be. Unhurried. Meaningful. The kind of quiet that feels full rather than empty. A violinist, a pianist, and a singer performed during the ceremony and if you have ever heard live music fill a Finnish church on a rainy summer day you will understand why I had to remind myself to keep shooting and not just stand there and feel it.







After the ceremony we made our way to the couple’s summer cottage for portraits. This is one of my favourite things about Finnish weddings. The summer cottage is not just a location, it is a whole world. It is where Finns go when they want to be most themselves. Away from the city, close to the water, with the people they love most. Photographing a couple there on their wedding day, in the place that means everything to them, is a privilege I do not take lightly.
And then came the moment of the day. Instead of driving to the reception venue, we took their little boat across the water to Aurantola.
In the rain. In a wedding dress. On a Finnish lake in June.
They did not hesitate for a single second. That tells you everything you need to know about this couple.

Aurantola itself is a pale blue historic manor sitting on the shores of Karijärvi lake in Jaala, Kymenlaakso. It has been welcoming guests since the 1600s and you feel that history the moment you arrive. The kind of venue that does not need decoration to feel extraordinary because the setting does all the work. Stone walls, lake views, candlelight, and the particular quality of Finnish summer light that refuses to fully disappear even late in the evening.
The reception was in the barn. Heartfelt speeches, a shoe game that had the whole room laughing, a bouquet throw, a garter toss, incredible food, and a live band playing Finnish classics that had guests on the dance floor until the night finally, reluctantly, got dark.


I shoot both digital and 35mm film and this wedding called for both. There is something about Finnish summer light on film, the grain, the warmth, the slightly dreamlike quality, that feels like it was made for days exactly like this one.

I am a Finnish-Australian wedding photographer based in Mildura, Australia. I return to Finland every summer to photograph weddings here. I know this light. I know what it means to get married in Finland and I show up to every wedding knowing that these moments, the boat on the lake, the rain on the veil, the couple who doesn’t care about any of it because they’re together, are the ones that matter forever.

If you are planning a wedding at Aurantola, Valkeala kirkko, or anywhere in Kymenlaakso, South Karelia, or the greater Helsinki area and you want photography that feels like this, I would love to hear from you.
Interested in learning more about the Miss Moody wedding photography packages? Click here: https://missmoodyphoto.com/finland-suomi
Kiinnostuitko? Lue lisää Suomen hääkuvauspaketeista tästä https://missmoodyphoto.com/finland-suomi
Tutustuaksesi Aurantolan juhlatilaan voit klikata heidän kotisivuilleen tästä: https://aurantola.fi/fi/tilaisuudet-ja-tapahtumat/
Valkealan kirkko löytyy Kouvolan seurakunnan sivuilta https://www.kouvolanseurakunnat.fi/kirkot-ja-tilat/kirkot/valkealan-kirkko
I am booking Finnish weddings for summer 2027 and 2028.