There are weddings where the guest list tells you everything you need to know about the couple. Isamar and Michel had 100 people fly in from Sweden, Lebanon, Dubai, and beyond. She is Lebanese. He is half Finnish, half Senegalese. They met five years ago and haven’t looked back since.
They chose Greece. Specifically, Island Art & Taste on the Athens Riviera, a venue that sits directly on the Aegean, where the sea is part of the architecture.
It was always going to be cinematic. What surprised me was how human it was.

The venue
Island Art & Taste is not a neutral backdrop. It has a specific character, Mediterranean, open, built around light and water. Both the ceremony and the reception happened there, which means the day had a natural continuity. No transfers, no interruptions. Just one location evolving from afternoon into night.
For a wedding videographer in Greece, this kind of venue is a gift. The light changes slowly and beautifully. The sea does most of the work.
The people
What defined this wedding wasn’t the setting, it was the collision of cultures in one place. Swedish restraint next to Lebanese warmth next to the effortless elegance that comes when people from many places find a common language for one day.
Isamar wanted it candid. She used that word specifically, candid and romantic, organic rather than staged. That’s exactly the kind of direction that disappears the moment filming starts, because it’s not direction at all. It’s permission.
Michel was calm. Steady. The kind of presence that anchors a room without trying to.
Together, they were easy to film.
Athens Riviera in September
The Athens Riviera has a quality of light that photographers and filmmakers travel specifically to find. Warm, directional, long into the evening. The Aegean amplifies everything, colours, reflections, the sense that time is moving slightly slower than it should.
As a Greece wedding videographer, the Athens Riviera is one of those locations where the environment actively collaborates with the story.
Filming multicultural weddings in Greece
Every culture celebrates differently. When several cultures meet at one wedding, the result is something that no amount of planning fully anticipates, and that’s where the most honest footage lives. In the transitions, the overlaps, the moments when someone forgets there’s a camera in the room.
That’s what I film.
If you’re planning a wedding in Greece, on the Athens Riviera, on an island, or anywhere the light is right, I’d like to hear about it.
