Pasadena Wedding Photography
Pasadena wedding photographer, David DeRemus, is a professional photographer who has lived in or next to Pasadena for over a decade.
I am experienced with doing wedding photography with the majority of wedding venues and churches in the city of Pasadena including the Historic Castle Green Hotel , The Langham, Huntington Hotel & Spa/Pasadena, Twin Palms-Pasadena, the Hilton Pasadena, The Rococo Room at Cafe Santorini, El Fornaio, Imperial Palace and Banquet Hall, the Ninth Circuit Courthouse, Cal Tech, Pasadena Westin Hotel, Pasadena Sheraton Hotel, The Pasadena Museum of California Art (PMCA), The Chapel of the Roses St. Andrews Catholic Church, Westminster Presbyterian Church, First United Methodist Church, Neighborhood Church of Pasadena, The Gable House, Romanesque Room, Throop Unitarian Church, Pasadena Masonic Temple, First United Methodist Church, San Marino Community Church, Pasadena Presbyterian Church, First Congregational Church of Pasadena, All Saints Episcopal Church, Pasadena City Court House, St. Philip the Apostle and The Athenaeum at Caltech. And to any sites I have done wedding photography at, but that may have overlooked apologies are offered.
And in addition to the Pasadena venues and churches I am also familiar with locations such as The Colorado Street Bridge*, Old Town Pasadena’s Colorado Blvd., and many of the cool streets and alleys in Old Town Pasadena.
I know the city of Pasadena and I know it well… Here are a few images from around the City of Pasadena, starting with the Pasadena City Hall.

Speaking of the Colorado Street bridge, here is something from an engagement session on the bridge. These two photos were used as the opening page in their custom Designer Storybook wedding album.

And from another engagement session photographed in a not as recognizable location in Pasadena.

Please visit My Style As A Wedding Photographer.
To see more of my work please visit www.deremus.com.
And in the Pasadena area and San Gabriel Valley I have done wedding photography at the Villa del Sol d’Oro, Almansor Court, the Monrovia Historical Museum, Altadena Town and Country Club, The Los Angeles County Arboretum & Botanic Garden, Descanso Gardens, La Cañada Flintridge Country Club, The Church of the Lighted Window, Monterey Hill Restaurant, The Granada, Los Angeles River Center and Gardens, San Gabriel Country Club, The Quiet Cannon Montebello, Santa Anita Church, San Marino Community Church, Holy Family Church, Holy Angels Church, Edward’s Mansion, Etiwanda Gardens, Lindley-Scott House, Santa Anita Golf Course, and there of course are many, many more.
And this is the short list…
I offer my talents as a wedding photographer to the greater Pasadena area and San Gabriel Valley, the City and County of Los Angeles and all of Southern California including Orange, San Diego, Ventura and Santa Barbara Counties and the Inland Empire. I am available to travel for destination weddings worldwide. And I consider the California Central Cost just a short road trip away.
I also have another website which is Pasadena Wedding Photography.
(All images are copyright David DeRemus Photography and may not be used without prior express written consent.)
*The Colorado Street Bridge was designed and built in 1913 by the firm of J.A.L. Waddell, based in Kansas City, Missouri. The structure carries Colorado Boulevard (then called “Colorado Street”), the major east-west thoroughfare connecting Pasadena with Eagle Rock and Glendale to the west. It spans 1,486 feet (453 m) and is notable for its distinctive Beaux Arts arches, light standards, and railings. The bridge is on the National Register of Historic Places and has been designated a National Historic Civil Engineering Landmark by the American Society of Civil Engineers.
During the early years of the twentieth century, the Colorado Street Bridge was known locally as “Suicide Bridge” after dozens of suicides. A suicide barrier was added which reduced the number of suicides, but the bridge retained its nickname. In 1989, after the Loma Prieta earthquake in Northern California, the bridge was declared a seismic hazard and closed to traffic. It was reopened in 1993 after a substantial retrofit. The bridge is closed each summer for a festival, “A Celebration on the Colorado Street Bridge”, hosted by historic preservation group Pasadena Heritage.




