Elopement Videographers in Colorado

4 elopement videographers serving Colorado couples planning an elopement or micro wedding.

Elopement Videographer

Caleb Clayton Film + Photo

Buena Vista, Colorado · $$ · from $3,500

Operating from Buena Vista in the Arkansas River valley, Caleb Clayton delivers both filmmaking and photography for elopements, which lets couples…

Elopements · Adventure Elopements · Micro Weddings

Elopement Videographer

Embr Films

Denver, Colorado · $$

Film is the entire product at Embr Films, a Denver videography studio run by Elizabeth that concentrates on elopements and micro-weddings rather th…

Elopements · Micro Weddings · Adventure Elopements

Elopement Videographer

Molly Margaret Photography + Videography

Denver, Colorado · $$

Hybrid coverage in both senses defines Molly Margaret's Denver studio: she offers photography and videography as a combined service, and she shoots…

Elopements · Micro Weddings · LGBTQ+ Friendly

Elopement Videographer

Vow of the Wild

Denver, Colorado · $$

Eleven years in business and more than 275 couples served make Vow of the Wild one of the longer-running elopement media teams in Colorado. Lisa an…

Elopements · Adventure Elopements · LGBTQ+ Friendly

Filming a Colorado elopement: drone law, permits, and mountain audio

Federal film rules changed in January 2025, and videographers benefit most: under the EXPLORE Act, recording with a small crew — the National Park Service applies the threshold at groups of six or fewer, with limited flexibility up to eight — no longer triggers a filming permit on NPS land, whether or not money changes hands. The ceremony itself is separate paperwork: Rocky Mountain National Park still charges a $300 administrative fee for a wedding at one of its twelve approved locations, but the filmmaker documenting it needs nothing extra.

Plan on zero drone footage inside national parks. A 2014 NPS policy memo closed every park unit to launching, landing, or operating unmanned aircraft, and Rocky Mountain makes no exception for FAA-certified pilots. Colorado's state parks are nearly as strict — CPW Regulation #100-c.24 bars drones everywhere except the model airfields at Cherry Creek and Chatfield, though individual parks occasionally grant case-by-case approvals. Aerial shots usually mean national forest land, where FAA Part 107 rules govern instead.

Sound is the craft problem nobody warns couples about. Wind above treeline can bury vows entirely, so experienced Colorado filmmakers mic both partners with lavaliers and scout wind-sheltered spots in advance. They will also push for early starts: calm morning air, soft light on east-facing peaks, and a wrapped ceremony before the storm cycle that builds over the divide most summer afternoons.