Wildflower Farms Wedding Photography
A few weddings I've photographed at Wildflower Farms.
Wildflower Farms, photographed.
See Wildflower Farms's own site
Browse Wildflower Farms's website for availability, pricing, and booking details — then come back to the real galleries above to see how a day there actually looks.
Wildflower Farms is a 140-acre resort in Gardiner, New York, at the base of the Shawangunk Ridge. It's part of the Auberge Resorts Collection, which puts it in a different category from most Hudson Valley wedding venues. The property opened in 2022 and was designed from the ground up as a high-end destination, with meadows, orchards, heirloom gardens, and 65 freestanding cabins and cottages spread across the landscape. It's about ninety minutes from Manhattan.
The property occupies a position in the market that's distinct from anything else in the region. This is a resort wedding, not a venue rental. The architecture is contemporary and intentional, the grounds are maintained at a level that reflects the hospitality brand behind it, and the experience for guests extends beyond the wedding day into a full weekend of lodging, dining, spa access, and programming.
The primary event spaces are the Maplehouse and the Marigold Room. Maplehouse is a modern barn with soaring ceilings that seats 75 for dinner inside or opens onto the Event Lawn where a tented reception can handle up to 225. The Maplehouse complex includes the Acorn Room for getting ready, a Miele-equipped kitchen, a mezzanine loft, a courtyard, and Maple Lane, a tree-lined path that works as a ceremony site for up to 225 guests. The Marigold Room is the largest indoor space, seating 125 for dinner with floor-to-ceiling windows facing the Shawangunk Ridge. It has a heated porch and its own Event Lawn.
Ceremonies happen outdoors in most cases. Maple Lane puts the couple under a canopy of mature trees with the landscape opening behind. The Event Lawns offer more open settings with ridgeline views. The property's scale means ceremony and reception can feel connected without being on top of each other.
The in-house culinary team builds menus around the property's farm and surrounding Hudson Valley producers. The food here reflects the Auberge brand, which means it's positioned at the level of a destination restaurant rather than a catering operation. Bar service is handled in-house as well.
On-site accommodations are a defining feature. Sixty-five cabins, cottages, and suites are scattered across the property, each freestanding with wood-clad interiors, fireplaces, private patios, and outdoor fire pits. Having guests stay on the property for the full weekend changes the nature of the event. Welcome dinners, morning yoga, spa treatments, cooking classes, and guided walks through the meadows are all available as weekend programming.
Pricing is not publicly listed and varies by season, guest count, and whether you opt for a full-property buyout. The buyout gives you exclusive access to every accommodation, venue space, and amenity on the property. For couples who want that level of seclusion and control, it's the way to use this venue. Contact the events team directly for current rates.
The Green Room, a subterranean lounge on the property, works for rehearsal dinners and after-parties. The Ridge Suite is available as a private retreat for the couple. If Wildflower Farms is on your list and you want to discuss how the photography works here, get in touch.
The property's design and landscape make it one of the stronger photography environments in the Hudson Valley. The 140 acres of meadows, orchards, and gardens provide variety that most venues can't match, and the Shawangunk Ridge as a backdrop adds a mountain presence to wide shots without requiring elevation.
The Maplehouse barn interior has the volume and architecture for reception coverage with depth. The soaring ceilings and clean lines give you vertical space in wide shots, and the natural materials (wood, stone) handle off-camera flash well without harsh bounce. During golden hour, light enters through the barn's openings and the adjacent Event Lawn creates a secondary shooting environment where warm light fills the space.
For ceremonies on Maple Lane, the tree canopy provides dappled, filtered light that softens faces and creates texture in the overhead frame. A ceremony between 4 and 5pm in summer puts the couple in warm light with the trees providing natural diffusion. The depth of the tree-lined path gives you a strong leading-line composition from the back of the ceremony looking forward.
The Marigold Room's floor-to-ceiling windows facing the Shawangunk Ridge are the key feature for indoor reception photography. The ridgeline view fills the background of every wide shot, and the natural light entering through those windows carries the early dinner coverage before transitioning to ambient and candle-lit conditions. The heated porch creates a secondary space where guests can move between indoors and outdoors, providing variety in the candid coverage.
For couple portraits, the meadows are the primary location. Walking the couple into the wildflower fields with the ridge behind provides shots that are specific to this property. The orchards offer a different texture: organized rows with fruit on the branches in late summer and fall. The gardens provide seasonal color. The cabin architecture, with its clean lines and natural materials, works as a contemporary backdrop that contrasts with the wilder landscape elements.
The getting-ready situation here is strong. The cabins have good natural light, designed interiors, and enough space to work comfortably. The Acorn Room in the Maplehouse complex is available as a dedicated bridal suite. If the wedding party is spread across multiple cabins, the photographer needs to plan the morning route between locations, but the quality of each space means every frame looks finished.
The scale of the property requires timeline planning. Distances between the cabins, the ceremony site, the reception venue, and the portrait locations are real. Build in transition time and coordinate transport if the spaces you're using are at opposite ends of the resort.
Best photo spots at Wildflower Farms.
Maple Lane
Tree-lined ceremonial path with mature canopy overhead. Filtered light creates depth and natural framing. Strong for ceremony coverage and couple portraits with leading-line composition. Seats up to 225 for outdoor ceremonies.
Maplehouse Barn
Modern barn with soaring ceilings and clean architectural lines. Natural materials provide warm tones in reception coverage. Volume allows wide dance floor and speech photography with depth. The mezzanine loft offers an elevated vantage point.
Marigold Room
Largest indoor space with floor-to-ceiling windows facing the Shawangunk Ridge. The ridgeline fills the background of every wide shot. Natural light carries through early dinner. Works for reception coverage, speeches, and first dances.
Event Lawns
Expansive open-air spaces adjacent to both Maplehouse and Marigold. Ridgeline views in the background. Works for tented receptions, cocktail hours, and wide landscape portraits. Late afternoon light comes in across the meadows from the west.
Meadows and Wildflower Fields
140 acres of rolling landscape with seasonal wildflowers. The fields with the Shawangunk Ridge behind provide the signature portrait location. Walking the couple into the meadow produces shots specific to this property.
Orchards and Gardens
Heritage apple and pear trees in organized rows, plus heirloom garden plantings. Late summer and fall bring fruit and seasonal color. A different texture from the open meadows for couple portraits.
Guest Cabins
Freestanding cabins with wood-clad interiors, fireplaces, and private patios. Well-designed spaces with natural light for getting-ready coverage. Each cabin has its own character while maintaining a consistent design standard.
- Guest Capacity
- Up to 225 (125 seated indoors)
- Site Fee
- Contact venue for current pricing
- Closest Transit
- Poughkeepsie, 30 Min. Drive (Metro-North/Amtrak)
- Parking
- On-site parking for guests
Start the conversation with the events team early and ask the right questions about pricing structure. Wildflower Farms does not publish rates, and the total cost depends on the event space, guest count, season, catering selections, and whether you're doing a partial or full-property buyout. Get a comprehensive estimate before committing so there are no surprises. This is a resort wedding, and the budget reflects that positioning. The venue's events team is accustomed to walking couples through the options.
Consider the full-property buyout if exclusivity matters to you. Without a buyout, the resort operates as a hotel with other guests on the property. The buyout gives you every cabin, every venue space, and every amenity for the weekend. It changes the feel of the celebration from a wedding at a resort to a private retreat for your group. The cost is significant, but for couples with the budget, the difference in experience is real.
Build the weekend around the property's programming. Wildflower Farms offers yoga, cooking classes, spa treatments, guided nature walks, and seasonal activities. Rather than planning every hour yourself, let the resort's programming fill the gaps between Friday welcome dinner, Saturday wedding, and Sunday brunch. Your guests are staying at a high-end resort with 140 acres to explore. Give them time to use it.
Choose your event space based on guest count and season. The Maplehouse barn and its Event Lawn work for larger weddings up to 225 with tent expansion. The Marigold Room is the best indoor option for weddings up to 125 seated, with windows that make the room feel larger than its footprint. For smaller gatherings, The Green Room offers an intimate subterranean space with a different mood. In cooler months, the Marigold Room's heated porch extends the usable indoor space without losing the outdoor connection.
Time your ceremony around the ridge light. The Shawangunk Ridge sits to the west, and the best light hits the ceremony areas between 4 and 5:30pm in summer as the sun moves toward the ridge. In fall, shift earlier as the days shorten. The meadows catch warm lateral light during this window, which is when the property photographs at its best. Schedule couple portraits during this same window, even if it means stepping away from cocktail hour for fifteen minutes.
Vendors I've worked with at Wildflower Farms.
Wildflower Farms — FAQs.
How much does it cost to have a wedding at Wildflower Farms?
Wildflower Farms does not publish wedding pricing. Costs vary based on event space, guest count, season, catering selections, and whether a full-property buyout is included. The venue is part of the Auberge Resorts Collection and is positioned as a destination wedding experience. Contact the events team directly at wff.weddings@auberge.com or (855) 472-3188 for a custom proposal based on your wedding details.
How many guests can Wildflower Farms accommodate?
Wildflower Farms accommodates up to 125 seated guests in the Marigold Room, the largest indoor venue. The Maplehouse barn seats 75 for dinner. Outdoor Event Lawns and Maple Lane handle up to 225 guests for ceremonies and tented receptions. The property's multiple venue spaces allow different configurations based on guest count and event flow.
Does Wildflower Farms have on-site accommodations?
Yes. Wildflower Farms has 65 freestanding cabins, cottages, and suites spread across the 140-acre property. Accommodations feature wood-clad interiors, fireplaces, private patios, and outdoor fire pits. Full-property buyouts give exclusive access to all 65 accommodations for the wedding weekend. Without a buyout, a room block can be arranged for wedding guests alongside other hotel guests.
What happens if it rains at Wildflower Farms?
Wildflower Farms has indoor alternatives for every part of the wedding. The Maplehouse barn and the Marigold Room are both fully enclosed, climate-controlled spaces that work for ceremonies and receptions year-round. The Marigold Room's heated porch provides a covered outdoor-adjacent option. Ceremonies can move from Maple Lane or the Event Lawn into either indoor venue. The events team works with each couple on weather contingency plans.
Does Wildflower Farms handle catering in-house?
Yes. Wildflower Farms provides all food and beverage service in-house through the resort's culinary team. Outside caterers are not permitted. Menus are farm-driven and seasonal, built around ingredients grown on the property and sourced from Hudson Valley producers. The kitchen accommodates dietary restrictions and works with each couple on custom menus for rehearsal dinners, the wedding reception, and farewell brunches.
What is the best time of year to get married at Wildflower Farms?
Wildflower Farms hosts weddings year-round. Late September and early October are the strongest months from a photography standpoint: the Shawangunk Ridge carries fall foliage, the meadows have warm afternoon light, and temperatures are comfortable for outdoor ceremonies. Summer offers the longest evening light and warmest conditions for the outdoor spaces. Spring brings wildflower blooms across the meadows, which is how the property got its name. Winter weddings use the indoor venues and benefit from the fireplaces and cozy cabin atmosphere.
Planning reading for Wildflower Farms.
- Best Wedding Hair and Makeup Artists in the Hudson Valley (A Photographer's Guide)
- Best Wedding DJs and Bands in the Hudson Valley (A Photographer's Guide)
- Best Wedding Planners in the Hudson Valley (A Photographer's Recommendations)
- How Much Does a Hudson Valley Wedding Actually Cost? (2026 Breakdown by Budget Tier)
Photographing a wedding at Wildflower Farms?
I know the light, the timeline, and the quiet corners of this venue. Text 845-335-8688 for fastest response — Joshua replies personally.