Satin, Staircases, and After-Dark Cake at Hotham Hall
At Hotham Hall in Yorkshire, this styled shoot looks at what happens when a historic setting is allowed to feel alive. The rooms have scale, portraits, staircases, deep colour and heavy drapery, but the mood never feels stiff. The bride laughs on the sofa, the couple lean into cake and champagne, and even the more formal portraits carry a looseness that makes the house feel lived in rather than admired from a distance. For couples imagining a wedding in England, this is a reminder that a grand setting does not have to mean a severe one.
Katy Melling describes Hotham Hall as a place where “its grandeur and spirit” create “the perfect canvas for a celebration of classic chic refinement.” In the images, that grandeur is most powerful when it meets softness: a satin gown spilling over a blue staircase, a veil drawn across the bride’s face on the terrace, a groom holding a pale bouquet beside a portrait-lined wall. The styling does not try to compete with the building. It gives the rooms enough room to speak.
That relationship between setting and detail is clearest in the tables. One sits in green tones, lit by tiny lamps and filled with pale, cloud-like flowers. Another brings candlelight, lilac florals and patterned linen into a library-style room, making the space feel more like a dinner party than a display. Katy said that “every detail of this style shoot was created with intention,” from “seasonal tone florals” to “soft linens and the wider landscape.” The strongest details here are not the loudest ones; they are the ones that feel as though they belong to the house.
The portraits carry the same restraint, but with more personality. The bride’s look moves between poise and play: sculptural in the gown, relaxed in a beaded evening mini, laughing with cake, champagne and the groom after dark. The couple are styled with a clear point of view, yet the images give them room to be human. That matters for a wedding venue in Yorkshire like Hotham Hall, where the architecture could easily dominate. Here, the people remain the centre.
The outdoor images bring a quieter shift. The stone exterior, formal gardens, terrace and autumn colour give the shoot a sense of place without turning it into a countryside postcard. A black and white portrait on the lawn feels almost editorial in its simplicity; another, taken in front of the house, shows how well the pale brick and blue door work with classic black tie and a full skirt. For couples browsing wedding venues in England, it shows the value of a venue with both strong interiors and composed outdoor spaces.
Katy called the shoot “a story rooted in Grace and quiet sophistication – modern ode to romance, captured in its most effortless form.” What makes that idea work is the contrast. The house brings structure; the styling brings softness; the couple bring movement and ease. It is not a shoot about making Hotham Hall look grand. It already is. It is about making that grandeur feel close enough to step into.
Wedding team
VENUE: @hothamhallestate
PHOTOGRAPHER: @katymellingphotography
VIDEOGRAPHER: @justpressplayfilms
FLORAL DESIGN: @elderandiris
STYLIST: @beatiesevents
MAKEUP: @thecostachic
HAIR STYLIST: @hairbytosetti
CONTENT CREATOR: @_contentlykate
DRESSES: @marrime_bridalwear @kyhabride
CAKE: @wheretheribbonends
STATIONERY: @omg.invitations
SUIT: @mrmunromenswear