03/02/2026
Chinese Tea Ceremony Wedding Tips šš»
Featuring Theresa and Jason š¤
As the Lunar New Year is approaching, letās talk about this. A Chinese tea ceremony is not a āquick traditionā you squeeze in.
It is structured, symbolic, emotional - and it rewards couples who prepare for it properly.
From the Fetch-the-bride/Door Games, to the First Look, to the kneeling sequence, to the order of serving elders, to the exchange of blessings, red packets and jewellery - every moment here has meaning. And when itās done well, it becomes one of the most fun yet intimate part of the wedding day.
A few things couples rarely realise until itās too late:
⢠The ceremony runs smoother when roles are clearly assigned (who opens doors, who cues elders, who manages red packets).
⢠Space matters. Light, room layout, and guest positioning directly affect how this is experienced ā and photographed.
⢠Timing is critical. Rushing this dilutes the emotion and creates unnecessary stress.
⢠Preparation beats spontaneity here. Calm, confident couples get better moments - every time.
My role isnāt just to document what happens.
Itās to anticipate it. I would go one step further that most would, to help you with the room layout as well. The architect in me wants to.
I guide couples through the flow, read the room, and know exactly when to step back - so what you remember isnāt chaos, but connection.
If youāre planning a Chinese tea ceremony (Hong Kong style or otherwise), treat it with the respect it deserves. Done right, it becomes one of the most meaningful chapters of your day.
Melbourne-based wedding photographer specialising in Chinese tea ceremonies and culturally rich wedding traditions.