Iceland photographer

Iceland Wedding Photographer // Beau & Erica

Iceland Wedding Photographer // Beau & Erica

Beau and Erica came all the way to Iceland after years of marriage and a few kids, from Ohio to renew their vows under a waterfall in gale force winds. Iceland in the fall has some of the prettiest weather but also some of the craziest so there is no way of knowing what you are going to get.

Iceland Wedding Photographer // Blake & Joanne

Iceland Wedding Photographer // Blake & Joanne

We headed out just before sunset to get the best light and made a quick stop by a lake with crazy rock formations that must have been trolls in their past life, then we drove past lava fields and sulphur smelling hot springs and finally found our selves driving along a sketchy road we had never been down before.

Iceland Wedding Photographer // Conor & Katelyn

Iceland Wedding Photographer // Conor & Katelyn

Conor & Katelyn decided to go on a little adventure with us while traveling in Iceland all the way from the States last fall. They braved the Icelandic wind with us for a few hours while we explored the rugged landscape of the Reykjanes peninsula.

Iceland Wedding Photographer // Ed & Jamie

Iceland Wedding Photographer // Ed & Jamie

Sometimes when you take big risks you get great rewards. Planning an outdoor wedding in Iceland in November is a big risk. Hurricane force winds, sleet, snow, rain, frost or all of the above are just a few of the things that might make standing outside in a wedding dress a bit unpleasant.

Iceland Wedding Photographer // Jared & Jessica

Iceland Wedding Photographer // Jared & Jessica

This adventure started in a church just outside Reykjavík and then took us through lava fields, snow, black sand, a lighthouse and even inside a waterfall. 

Iceland Photographer // Árný & Eiríkur

Iceland Photographer // Árný & Eiríkur

Trees are hard to find in Iceland and there is this ongoing joke here that if you get lost in an Icelandic forrest the only thing you have to do is stand up. But there is a spot in the far east that has a decent amount of trees, so decent in fact that you might even call it a forrest, Hallormsstaðaskógur to be exact.