Arabella Media
"I know these trails, these views, and all the hidden spots where magic happens" is the pitch from Veronika Rae Richardson, whose woman-owned Sedon…
Elopements · Micro Weddings · Adventure Elopements
4 elopement videographers serving Arizona couples planning an elopement or micro wedding.
"I know these trails, these views, and all the hidden spots where magic happens" is the pitch from Veronika Rae Richardson, whose woman-owned Sedon…
Elopements · Micro Weddings · Adventure Elopements
Every wedding booked with Leslie Allred Films comes with three deliverables as standard: a highlight film, the full ceremony recording, and a previ…
Elopements
Four metal-tiered collections structure the offer at Sedona Wedding Films, a videography studio in Sedona run by Shannon that covers elopements, mi…
Elopements · Micro Weddings · Adventure Elopements
Editorial eye, documentary soul: that is the self-description at Twin Flames Photo & Film, a Phoenix studio shooting both photography and videograp…
Elopements · Adventure Elopements · Destination
Drone footage is the first thing to talk through with an Arizona videographer, because the two most-requested backdrops both prohibit it. The National Park Service bans launching, landing, or operating uncrewed aircraft anywhere inside Grand Canyon under 36 CFR 1.5, with violations carrying fines up to $5,000 — and around Sedona, the Red Rock–Secret Mountain and Munds Mountain Wilderness areas, home to most of the famous formations, are closed to drones under the Wilderness Act. Legal aerials mean flying from non-wilderness forest, BLM, or state trust land under standard FAA rules.
Ground filming got simpler in January 2025: the EXPLORE Act dropped the old commercial-filming permit for crews of eight or fewer on NPS land, and recording that documents an already-permitted event — your ceremony — never needs its own authorization. On Coconino National Forest, ask the Red Rock Ranger District about current implementation, since agency rollout of the new law varies.
Then there's the light. Desert sun at midday is brutally contrasty on camera, so experienced shooters build coverage around the first and last hour of the day; in canyon country, rock walls cut usable light well before the published sunset time. Wind across rims and mesas is near-constant, so lavalier mics with serious wind protection matter more here than almost anywhere.
Planning budgets too? See elopement packages in Arizona.