Groom smiling at the bride as she holds colourful flowers by the staircase.

Spring, Bottled: A Colour-Driven Wedding at Acre Resort in Cabo

Photographed by Julieta Amezcua

Summarised perfectly by photographer Julieta Amezcua, “Caitie and Ryan’s wedding at Acre in Cabo felt like spring bottled up and poured into one perfect day.” Not in a styled, overworked way, but in the sense that every part of it seems to speak the same language. At Acre Resort, a wedding venue in Cabo wrapped in palms and warm light, colour never sits quietly in the background. It moves through the whole celebration and gives it shape.

That starts with the contrast between the couple and everything around them. Caitie’s gown is clean and sculptural, almost spare against the garden, while Ryan’s black tux keeps the same sense of clarity. Around them, the palette opens up. Coral, peach, orange and pink appear in the florals, in the bridesmaids’ dresses, across the tables, and even in the way the ceremony space sits against the dense green of the resort. For couples planning a wedding in Mexico, it’s a good reminder that strong colour does not need to overpower a setting like this. Here, it feels alive because the landscape is alive too.

Bride with bridesmaids in pink, coral, and orange dresses before the ceremony.
Close portrait of the bride with a pink and orange bouquet beside textured concrete.
Bride in a sleek gown smiling on a sunlit balcony before the ceremony.

“Surrounded by lush palms and golden light, they leaned into a palette of warm, joyful color—sunset corals, soft peaches, and vibrant florals that brought an effortless energy to every moment.” You can see that energy most clearly in the way people occupy the space. The guests are not visually separate from the wedding; they seem folded into it. Their clothing, the floral arches, the chairs on the lawn, the candlelit tables under the trees — none of it feels isolated. If you’re browsing wedding venues in Mexico, this is part of what makes Acre so compelling: the setting has enough presence to hold vivid choices without making them feel loud.

Bride and groom walking hand in hand through lush palms in Baja.
Aerial ceremony view at Acre Baja, with chairs arranged between dense palms.
Bride and bridesmaids holding colourful bouquets against a pale architectural wall.
Bride holding a pink and orange bouquet against a pale ribbed architectural wall.
Wedding party gathered poolside, with bright dresses contrasting black tuxedos and palms.
Groom in a black tuxedo adjusting his jacket in a softly lit room.
Bride and groom standing beneath sculptural palms along a quiet garden path.
Yellow orchids and soft pink flowers arranged with candlelight on a white table.
Newlyweds kissing in the garden aisle as guests cheer around them.

The ceremony images push that idea further. “The ceremony was made even more personal as their best friend officiated, setting the tone for an incredibly emotional exchange where their love for each other was undeniable.” That closeness comes through not because the gallery tries to dramatise it, but because the room around them — even outdoors — feels emotionally open. The dip kiss in the aisle, the guests leaning in, the applause, the couple held inside a loose frame of flowers and faces: it all points to a wedding that wanted feeling to be visible.

Bride and groom standing together between vivid floral arches in a tropical garden.
Newlyweds kissing in front of a vivid floral installation and tropical garden greenery.
Coral wedding stationery, rings, and soft florals styled against dark stone at Acre Baja.
Soft peach and pink ceremony flowers arranged beside rows of wooden chairs.
Sunlit ceremony chairs face colourful floral pillars beneath towering palms.

The same goes for dinner. “The design was elevated but never overdone: long tables glowing under string lights, organic arrangements spilling with texture, and guests dressed like part of the story”, shared Julieta.  The tables are long and social. The flowers are loose and bright rather than formal. The tiled terrace, the orange napkins, the candlelight and the darkening garden do enough. It feels like a place where people are meant to sit close, stay long, and keep the mood going rather than break it into separate events.

Overhead view of long reception tables arranged across a patterned outdoor terrace.

“Caitie’s sculptural gown balanced modern elegance with ease, while Ryan met her with a quiet, grounded presence that made everything feel intimate despite the celebration.” That tension — between lively and calm, vivid and restrained — is what gives the wedding its pull. Even the late-night images keep hold of it. Nothing shifts into a different personality after dark; it just gets looser. For anyone drawn to a wedding in Mexico that feels social, warm and visually full without becoming too much, this one offers a clear point of view: let the place be lush, let the people be part of the palette, and let the atmosphere carry the rest.

Outdoor reception tables at Acre Baja glowing under string lights and trees.
Bride and groom seated together beneath string lights before the outdoor reception.
Coral napkin, candlelight, and bright flowers arranged across a refined reception table.
Lush pink and coral flowers styled on a candlelit wooden bar at night.
Long dinner table with colourful flowers, terracotta napkins, and glowing candles outdoors.
Groomsmen in black tuxedos and sunglasses posed across a modern stone staircase.
Scroll to Top