The first real question is not where
Most couples start in the same place.
They open Google and type “wedding location” or “wedding location in Italy”.
It feels practical. Efficient. Reasonable.
And yet, this is often where confusion begins.
Because choosing a location before understanding why you are choosing it is like selecting a frame before knowing the painting. Beautiful, perhaps — but disconnected.
The truth is simple, and quietly uncomfortable:
the perfect location doesn’t exist on Google.
It appears only after something else becomes clear.
Before the location, there is the experience
When couples tell me they are “looking for the perfect venue”, what they are really saying is something else.
They are asking:
How will this day feel?
Who will we be in it?
What will remain, once it’s over?
A location cannot answer these questions.
But these questions will always lead you to the right location.
Question one: Who are you, as a couple, in everyday life?
Not who you are on special occasions.
Not who you think you should be on your wedding day.
Who are you when no one is watching?
Are you quiet, reflective, private?
Or social, curious, energised by people and conversation?
Do you find beauty in simplicity, or in layers?
In silence, or in movement?
Your wedding doesn’t need to transform you into a different version of yourselves.
It should amplify what is already true.
The right location is not the one that impresses.
It’s the one that feels natural when you imagine yourselves in it — without effort, without performance.
Question two: Is this a moment… or a shared journey?
Some weddings are a single, intense moment.
A carefully designed day, powerful and self-contained.
Others are something else entirely.
They are a journey — unfolding slowly over time.
A welcome dinner.
A morning without urgency.
Long tables, conversations that stretch into the night.
The feeling that no one is rushing to leave.
Neither approach is right or wrong.
But the answer changes everything.
It changes the rhythm.
The logistics.
The geography.
A wedding conceived as a journey asks for a location that can hold time, not just beauty.
Question three: How present do you want to be?
This is a question many couples don’t realise they are avoiding.
Do you want to manage the day — or live inside it?
Some locations are visually extraordinary, but demanding.
They require constant attention, adaptation, compromise.
Others offer something more subtle:
the freedom to let go.
Presence is a luxury.
And it should be designed deliberately.
The right location is one that allows you to disappear into the experience, instead of constantly supervising it.
Question four: What kind of memory do you want to leave behind?
Not the photographs.
Not the aesthetic.The memory.
Do you want your guests to remember a place — or a feeling?
Years from now, what do you hope they’ll say?
“It was beautiful,”
or
“I’ve never felt so welcome, so included, so at ease.”
When this becomes clear, the location often reveals itself quietly — sometimes unexpectedly.
When clarity comes first, everything else follows
Choosing a wedding location is not an act of search.
It is an act of recognition.
The right place doesn’t need to convince you.
It resonates.
And when the experience is clear,
the location is no longer a question.
It becomes the answer.
Barbara