Create a beautiful wedding photobook that tells your love story — in just a few simple steps.
This short guide shows you how to pick a format, sort your photos, design clean layouts, and order a keepsake you’ll treasure forever.
Suggested designs for Wedding Photo Album: Classic Black Photobook, Classic White Photo Album, Celebrating Life Design, Jabardast Jodi Design, The Royal Celebrations design
Step 1: Choose your photobook type & size
Decide between softcover, hardcover, or lay-flat. Think about how you want to view big, panoramic shots (lay-flat works great) versus a durable keepsake for the coffee table (hardcover).

Step 2: Curate and organize your photos
Create a master folder and pick your favourites.
Aim to narrow down to roughly 75–150 final images. Group them into clear categories so the story flows:
- Getting ready
- Ceremony
- Portraits (couple, family, bridal party)
- Candid moments (dancing, toasts, laughter)
- Details & décor (rings, flowers, stationery)
Rename or number files in the order you’d like them to appear to make layout faster.
Step 3: Upload to Zoomin and set basics
Upload your sorted images, choose the book size, cover style, paper finish, and page count. These choices affect how your photos feel and how many images you can include without crowding pages.
Step 4: Arrange and customize
Use simple layouts to combine full-page hero shots with 2–4 photo collages. Drag-and-drop to swap images, add short captions to mark dates or moments, and keep a consistent visual rhythm across pages.
Step 5: Design for storytelling
Tell the day chronologically: preparations → ceremony → portraits → reception. Embrace white space and avoid cluttered pages — a clean layout makes photos pop. Vary the photo scale for interest and keep key faces away from the spine or fold.
Step 6: Review, save, and order
Preview every spread carefully (check cropped faces and spelling), save your draft, then order. Consider ordering one or two extra copies as gifts for parents or close family.
Pro tip: Mix posed portraits with candid shots to capture both emotion and detail — it makes the album feel more alive.




