Wedding DeskIn beta · early access by invitation

Test Wedding Day Workflow Notes

Wedding Desk shot list workspace prepared for ceremony coverage.

Table of contents

Start with the moments that can move

A wedding timeline looks clean when it is typed out, but the day itself rarely moves in straight lines. Someone is late from hair and makeup, the flowers arrive during portraits, or the ceremony space changes because the light is better somewhere else.

For photographers and videographers, the useful prep is not just knowing what should happen. It is knowing which moments can move, which moments cannot, and where a small delay will start to create pressure later in the day.

Keep the shot list connected to the timeline

A shot list is easier to trust when it sits close to the part of the day where it will actually be used. Family combinations belong near family portraits. Detail notes belong near prep. Ceremony coverage belongs where the ceremony pressure is highest.

That keeps the list from becoming a separate document you have to remember to check. It becomes part of the working plan instead.

Write notes for the tired version of yourself

The best notes are not clever. They are obvious at a glance. If a note needs to help you at 7:30 in the evening, after a long ceremony and a tight portrait block, it should be short, direct and placed exactly where you need it.

Leave room for judgment

Good planning should not make the day rigid. It should remove the low-value decisions so there is more attention left for the moments that actually need judgment.

That is the point of preparing the workflow: less scrambling, fewer forgotten details and more calm when the day starts moving faster than the schedule.

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About me

Hi, I'm Franck.

I didn't set out to build software. I set out to shoot weddings. Then I shot one. And another. Somewhere between a timeline that fell apart, a shot list I was keeping in my head, and 10 other things that ended up failing, it hit me: the photography is the easy part.

I didn't set out to build software. I set out to shoot weddings. Then I shot one. And another.

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Somewhere between a timeline that fell apart, a shot list I was keeping in my head, and 10 other things that ended up failing, it hit me: the photography is the easy part.

The hardest part ended up being everything around it. The planning, the prep, the delivery, and the quiet panic of hoping you didn't forget something on the most important day of two people's lives.

So I did what any reasonable person would do. I stopped shooting weddings and opened a laptop "just to try something." That was early 2026. I haven't really stopped since.

That little experiment is now Wedding Desk, software for the serious work behind wedding photography and videography. Somewhere along the way, "let me fix this one annoying thing" quietly turned into "I'm not putting this down until it's the best tool a wedding shooter can own."

Wow, what did I get myself into. But honestly? I love it.

The goal is simple: help photographers and videographers around the world prepare and deliver weddings with more calm and a lot more confidence.

Still building. Still slightly obsessed. Glad you're here.