425-646-2790

Bellevue Wedding Photography


Hyatt Regency Bellevue

Hyatt Regency, Downtown Bellevue

 

Congratulations on your upcoming wedding! Bellevue and the Eastside is a wonderful location for your wedding ceremony and reception. There are many possible venues, ranging from beautiful Bellevue parks to posh Bellevue hotels. Whatever you want for your venue, you should be able to find it in Bellevue.

I have an extensive listing of Seattle and Bellevue area wedding venues on my site, just click on the link.

Following are a few photos from some of my favorite Bellevue and other Eastside venues.

 

Hyatt Regency Bellevue

The Hyatt Regency Bellevue is an elegant venue for a wedding of any size. The Hyatt even offers a Complimentary Guest Room for the Bride and Groom with chilled Champagne and chocolate-covered strawberries.

Pickering Farm

Pickering Barn, Issaquah

 

Pickering Barn

The Pickering Barn in Issaquah is a very versatile wedding venue. In nice weather there is a beautiful outdoor ceremony area, and when the weather decides to be uncooperative the old Hay Barn makes for a wonderful indoor ceremony site. Additionally there is the Dairy Barn, which is perfect for receptions of up to 400 guests.

Robinswood House, Bellevue

Robinswood House, Bellevue

 

Robinswood House

The Robinswood House is located just off I90 in the Eastgate neighborhood of Bellevue. A wonderful location for either an indoor or outdoor ceremony and reception.

Bellevue Hilton

Bellevue Hilton

 

Bellevue Hilton

The Bellevue Hilton is another outstanding Bellevue venue for weddings and receptions of any size.

Chism Beach Park, Bellevue

Chism Beach Park

 

Chism Beach Park

Chism Beach Park is located just south of downtown Bellevue on Lake Washington. Outdoor facility only, but a beautiful place for a summer wedding.

Clise Mansion, Redmond

Clise Mansion, Redmond

 

Clise Mansion

The Clise Mansion, located in Marymoor Park about 10 minutes from Bellevue, is another fantastic Eastside wedding and reception venue. There is a spacious lawn for outdoor ceremonies, but if you prefer to be indoors there is plenty of room inside the mansion. Beautiful grounds make this another wonderful place for memorable wedding photos.

I would love to have the opportunity to meet and talk with about your plans for your Bellevue wedding. If you would like to talk with me about being your photographer at an upcoming Bellevue area wedding please call me at 425-646-2790 to make an appointment to discuss your plans, or to reserve your date.

Wedding Packages and Pricing Information

 


425-646-2790

 

 

History of Bellevue

A densely wooded swath of land between Lake Washington and Lake Sammamish, the area where Bellevue now stands was sparsely settled before the 1900s. If the thick forest weren't imposing enough, large boggy areas could intimidate would-be settlers. Native American tribes in the region favored the coast to the west and the plains east of the mountains.

In 1867 coal was discovered in the Coal Creek area, and white settlers began to arrive as extensive mining got underway at the Newcastle Coal Mine. William Meydenbauer and Aaron Mercer, wealthy adventurers from Seattle, staked large claims here in 1869. Over the next 40 years, other white settlers, including Civil War veterans awarded homesteads for their service, trickled into the vicinity.
Logging, almost by necessity, joined mining as an early occupation on the Eastside, as the settlers needed to clear land for their farms. During that period, the area got a post office and a schoolhouse. In the 1880s, the village got a name. Conflicting accounts attribute the name Bellevue ("Beautiful View" in French) to the view from the new post office's window or to the city in Indiana of the same name from which prominent settlers came.

Bountiful harvests

With the turn of the century, Bellevue prospered as a farming community. The rich soil yielded bountiful harvests, and the residents sold their fruit and vegetables, ferried across Lake Washington to Seattle, then transported even farther after a Northern Pacific rail line came through in 1904.
Japanese immigrants, brought to Washington to clear and improve property claims, made the most of small plots they leased. They established a collective warehouse and soon produced the bulk of the strawberries and vegetables harvested in Bellevue. The town's agrarian success was celebrated with the first Strawberry Festival in 1925.

With a Bridge, a Suburb Emerges

The completion of the first bridge across Lake Washington in 1940 was a major event for Bellevue, bringing an influx of new residents. Unfortunately, after the United States entered World War II, the federal government sent the Japanese-Americans who had put the city on the agricultural map away to internment camps.
It was a great loss to the community, but new multitudes came to Bellevue. Bellevue Square, one of the first suburban shopping centers in the country, was built then. The opening of a Frederick & Nelson store at Bellevue Square in 1946 was celebrated with an orchestra and a radio broadcast.

Cityhood, then Skyscrapers

The City of Bellevue incorporated in 1953, with a former schoolhouse offered rent-free by the Veterans of Foreign Wars serving as city hall until 1960. The young city proceeded to annex neighboring areas, growing from an area of 4.7 square miles by Meydenbauer Bay to more than 31 square miles today.
In the past two decades, the city has grown to skyscraper heights and shed its "suburban" status to become a thriving metropolis and a high-tech hub. Bellevue's gleaming downtown, which continues to grow dramatically, provides office space for thousands of professionals as well as condominiums and apartments for people who want to live in an urban setting.

 

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Wedding packages and pricing information, Seattle wedding photography