Kuitpo Forest Metal Themed Wedding – Erin & Michael
Some weddings feel elegant. Some feel romantic. Some feel wildly adventurous. Erin and Michael’s Metal themed wedding in the forests of Kuitpo landed firmly in the category of unforgettable. From the black wedding dress to the smoke-filled night portraits beneath towering pine trees, this celebration leaned fully into its gothic metal aesthetic and created an atmosphere that felt cinematic from start to finish.
As an Adelaide wedding photographer, getting the chance to photograph a wedding this creatively different is always exciting. Erin and Michael weren’t interested in traditional ballroom glamour or soft pastel styling. They wanted mood. They wanted texture. They wanted darkness, grain, smoke, harsh light, silhouettes, and images that looked more like album artwork than standard wedding portraits. Naturally, I was counting down the days until this wedding arrived.
Kuitpo Forest ended up being the perfect location for it all. The dense pines, fading light, earthy tones, and quiet isolation created an incredible backdrop for a wedding that felt deeply personal to them. Every detail reflected their personalities without trying to follow trends or expectations. The entire afternoon had this relaxed, intimate energy while still looking visually dramatic in every direction.
I even brought along my wife and niece to help manage lights and smoke during the evening portraits. Good thing too, because once the sun disappeared behind the trees, this turned into one of the most technically challenging and creatively rewarding weddings I’ve photographed in South Australia.
Metal Themed Wedding Ceremony in Kuitpo Forest
Their ceremony took place deep within Kuitpo Forest as daylight slowly disappeared through the trees. The ceremony location had been chosen specifically because of the way sunlight filtered through the pines at dusk, and it honestly could not have worked out more perfectly. Other than the random walkers that made it their mission to be as noisy and walk behind everything but I digress..
As Erin walked through the forest toward the ceremony spot in her black dress, the entire scene felt surreal. The tall pine trees towered overhead while beams of light broke through behind her, creating this naturally dramatic backdrop without needing anything overly styled or decorated. Nature did all the heavy lifting.
The wedding itself was intentionally intimate. Four witnesses attended along with their children, giving the ceremony a warm and relaxed atmosphere despite the darker aesthetic. It never felt cold or staged. In fact, the smaller guest list made the entire experience feel incredibly genuine and emotional.
Their littlest one nearly stole the entire show during the ceremony too. Between the serious gothic styling and the moody forest setting, having such an adorable little personality running around added this beautiful contrast to the day. Those tiny spontaneous moments are often what make intimate weddings so memorable. Everyone felt comfortable, relaxed, and fully present.
The vows were short, heartfelt, and emotional without becoming overly formal. Standing amongst the trees as evening light faded around them created this almost otherworldly atmosphere. Forest weddings already feel naturally immersive, but combined with Erin and Michael’s metal-inspired styling, it felt like stepping into an entirely different world hidden away in the Adelaide Hills.
Moody Forest Portraits with Smoke and Lights
Once the ceremony wrapped up, the real creative fun began.
Michael had specifically requested dark, grainy, moody portraits with heavy atmosphere and dramatic lighting. He wanted the images to feel almost like a metal band photoshoot rather than traditional wedding portraits, which instantly had me excited creatively.
Night photography inside a forest already creates an incredible canvas to work with. Adding smoke, portable lighting, and darkness into the mix takes things to another level entirely. The moment the sun disappeared completely, Kuitpo Forest transformed into the perfect cinematic backdrop.
Creating these kinds of images takes a surprising amount of coordination. Between managing camera settings in near darkness, positioning lighting equipment, directing poses, controlling smoke placement, and navigating uneven forest ground, having my wife and niece helping throughout the shoot made a huge difference. Weddings like this become very collaborative behind the scenes.
The smoke drifting through the trees created layers and depth in the images that simply wouldn’t exist otherwise. Light beams cut through the haze while Erin and Michael moved through the forest together, creating portraits that looked gritty, atmospheric, and intentionally imperfect in the best possible way.
We leaned heavily into shadows, silhouettes, harsh side lighting, and visible grain throughout the session. Rather than smoothing everything out or aiming for ultra-clean edits, the moodier texture became part of the storytelling. It suited both the location and their personalities perfectly.
At times it genuinely felt more like directing a music video than photographing a wedding.
One of the best parts about photographing weddings in Kuitpo Forest is how immersive the location becomes once night falls. The forest gets incredibly dark very quickly, and every small pocket of light suddenly becomes dramatic.
We wandered through different sections of the forest searching for interesting textures, fallen trees, open clearings, and narrow paths between the pines. Every direction offered a completely different mood depending on how the lights interacted with the smoke and surrounding trees.
Because Erin and Michael’s family headed off roughly halfway through portraits, it gave us the freedom to really experiment creatively without worrying about timelines or guests waiting around. Meanwhile, our niece became the unofficial MVP of the evening by helping keep the baby entertained while we disappeared deeper into the forest chasing dramatic shots.
Those extra pockets of uninterrupted time made such a difference. Instead of rushing through portraits, we could slowly build scenes, adjust lighting setups, and create images that felt intentional and cinematic.
Some of my favourite frames from the night involved very minimal posing. Erin and Michael naturally interacted with each other so comfortably that often the strongest photographs came from simply letting them move through the environment together while the smoke and lights created atmosphere around them.
Kuitpo Forest has long been one of the most visually striking locations for wedding photography near Adelaide, particularly for couples wanting something adventurous or unconventional. During daytime it offers beautiful earthy tones and towering woodland scenery. At night, it becomes dramatic, mysterious, and almost haunting in the most visually stunning way possible.
Alternative weddings like this Metal themed wedding thrive in locations that already carry personality, and Kuitpo Forest delivers that effortlessly. The towering pine plantations, rugged terrain, filtered light, and sense of isolation create an environment that feels immersive before a camera even comes out.
Photographically, it opens up endless creative possibilities too. Soft foggy mornings, golden evening light, dramatic night photography, silhouettes through trees, smoke effects, lanterns, fairy lights, and off-camera flash setups all work beautifully here. The forest responds incredibly well to moodier creative techniques.
Erin and Michael fully embraced what made their wedding different instead of trying to fit into expectations, and honestly that confidence is what made the entire day work so beautifully. Every decision felt authentic to them.
Erin and Michael’s Kuitpo Forest metal themed wedding was dark, emotional, intimate, chaotic, atmospheric, and wildly fun all at once. Exactly the kind of wedding that reminds me why I love photographing weddings in the first place.









