Wedding ceremony under the timber pavilion at Buttercup Café & Celebration Hall Manitoba — photography by Chris Ngo, Ngo Photography
Manitoba · Buttercup Café & Celebration Hall

Buttercup Café
Wedding Photography

Prairie light. A glass greenhouse. And a sky that goes on forever.

Buttercup Café & Celebration Hall is one of Manitoba's most thoughtfully designed wedding venues — a property that seems to have been built specifically for beautiful photography. The timber pavilion ceremony space, the glass greenhouse reception hall, the manicured gardens, and the surrounding prairie fields each create a completely distinct visual environment. Come for the venue. Stay for the golden hour.

I photographed Erin and Jayden's August wedding at Buttercup Café in 2025 and it remains one of my favourite days of the year. The ceremony was under the open-air hexagonal arch — dappled light filtering through the surrounding trees — and then the reception moved into the glass greenhouse as the evening cooled and the candles came up. By the time we slipped out for golden hour portraits, the Manitoba sky had turned everything amber and the surrounding fields were glowing. We danced on a dirt road at sunset. I will never get tired of days like that.

For couples who want their wedding to feel connected to the land — outdoor, unhurried, and deeply Manitoba — Buttercup Café is the answer. There is no comparable venue in the province for outdoor summer celebrations.

First kiss ceremony at Buttercup Café's outdoor hexagonal arch pavilion Manitoba — wedding photography by Chris Ngo, Ngo Photography Glass greenhouse wedding reception at Buttercup Café Celebration Hall Manitoba — photographed by Ngo Photography
The Venue

Why Buttercup Café photographs
like nowhere else in Manitoba

The Timber Pavilion

The open-air ceremony pavilion at Buttercup Café is the centrepiece of the property — a hexagonal wooden arch framed by mature trees and natural light. The dappled, filtered light that falls through the surrounding canopy is among the most flattering natural light I photograph in. Shadows from the leaves create gentle patterns across white dresses and dark suits. The long aisle leading to the arch gives photographers a natural leading line for the processional shot. And the recessional — couple running through a shower of petals under that canopy — produces one of the most reliably joyful frames of any wedding day.

The Glass Greenhouse

The reception hall at Buttercup Café is a stunning glass greenhouse structure that transforms as the day moves into evening. In the afternoon it reads as bright, fresh, and botanical — plants framing every table, natural light filling every corner. After sunset, with the candles lit and the string lights reflecting off the glass panels, it becomes something else entirely: intimate, warm, and genuinely beautiful. The glass walls also photograph exceptionally well at blue hour — the glow of the interior against the darkening prairie sky is one of my favourite reception images to make.

The Prairie Fields at Golden Hour

Nothing I can say will fully prepare you for golden hour at Buttercup Café. Manitoba summer evenings are long — the sun doesn't set until well after 9 PM near the solstice — and the light that spreads across those open prairie fields in the last hour before dark is cinematic in a way that only happens here. Wide sky, long light, dirt roads, white fences. If you schedule your portrait session for 60–90 minutes before sunset, you will come away with images that look like they belong in a film. This is not an exaggeration.

The Gardens

Between the ceremony arch and the greenhouse, Buttercup Café's manicured gardens offer multiple portrait environments: the fountain courtyard, the garden path, the perennial beds in full summer bloom. Each one creates a different mood and visual texture. For couples with a larger wedding party, this variety is a genuine gift — it means every group shot can have a completely different backdrop without anyone walking more than a few steps.

Erin and Jayden kissing under a parasol at golden hour on the Manitoba prairie — outdoor wedding photography by Ngo Photography
Bride twirling in full gown in the garden at Buttercup Café Manitoba — fine art wedding photography by Chris Ngo The Buttercup Café timber pavilion lit up at night under a wide Manitoba sky — wedding photography by Ngo Photography
Real Wedding · Buttercup Café · August 2025

Erin & Jayden —
Buttercup Café & Celebration Hall

Erin and Jayden chose Buttercup Café for their August 2025 wedding — an outdoor ceremony under the timber pavilion, a greenhouse reception that lasted well past midnight, and a golden hour portrait session that ended with them spinning on a dirt road as the Manitoba sun disappeared below the horizon. It was, in every sense, a summer wedding.

What struck me most about the day was how naturally everything unfolded. Buttercup Café is a venue that puts couples at ease — the grounds are beautiful enough that nobody feels anxious about the photos. Erin was laughing before I'd even asked her to. Jayden's groomsmen were already raising a toast under the trees. That ease translates directly into photographs. The gallery from that day is one of the fullest, warmest I've produced.

Read Erin & Jayden's full story →
From the Photographer

Tips for your Buttercup Café
portrait session

Give yourself 60–90 minutes before sunset for golden hour

The prairie fields surrounding Buttercup Café produce some of the most extraordinary golden hour light I photograph anywhere in Manitoba. This is not a session to rush. Build 60–90 minutes of portrait time before sunset into your timeline — preferably starting about an hour before the sun hits the horizon — and let the light do its work. The dirt roads, white fences, and open sky are at their absolute best in that window. If you're getting married in July or August, you have until 9:30 PM. Use it.

The hexagonal arch works best with just the two of you

The ceremony pavilion at Buttercup Café is stunning for ceremony coverage and for full wedding party portraits. But for intimate couple portraits under the arch itself, two people is the magic number. The scale of the arch frames a couple beautifully; larger groups can feel crowded within that framing. For your most romantic portraits of the day, pull away from the wedding party and spend 10 minutes under the arch alone. Those will be the images you come back to.

Build portrait time in both the gardens AND the fields

Buttercup Café's garden courtyard and the surrounding prairie fields are two entirely different photographic environments — which means they each deserve their own portrait time. The gardens work beautifully in the late afternoon before golden hour. The fields are at their best in that final 60 minutes before sunset. If your timeline allows, plan a short portrait rotation in the gardens during cocktail hour, then a longer golden hour session in the fields before returning to your reception.

Planning a wedding at Buttercup Café?

Let's make something lush and unforgettable.

Packages from $3,800 CAD · Based in Winnipeg · Available province-wide

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Frequently Asked Questions

Buttercup Café Weddings &
Winnipeg Wedding Photography

Where is Buttercup Café & Celebration Hall located?

Buttercup Café & Celebration Hall is located near Winnipeg, Manitoba — a short drive from the city. It's a private event venue that hosts a limited number of weddings each season. For exact directions and venue booking inquiries, contact Buttercup Café directly through their website or Instagram @buttercupcafe_celebrationhall.

What makes Buttercup Café good for wedding photography?

Buttercup Café offers several distinct photographic environments within a single venue — the hexagonal timber pavilion ceremony arch, the glass greenhouse reception hall, the manicured garden courtyard, and the surrounding Manitoba prairie fields. Each area produces completely different images. The defining feature, however, is the golden hour. The open fields surrounding the property catch the low Manitoba summer sun in a way that produces cinematic, wide-sky portraits that are impossible to replicate anywhere inside city limits.

What time of year is best for a Buttercup Café wedding?

Late spring through early fall — May through September — is the ideal season for a Buttercup Café wedding. Summer dates (June through August) offer the longest golden hour windows and the warmest evenings for outdoor celebrations. September can also be exceptional, with the change of light in the leaves adding warmth and texture to the surrounding fields. Contact the venue directly for their current availability calendar.

How much does it cost to book Buttercup Café for a wedding?

Pricing varies based on the date, guest count, and package selected. Contact Buttercup Café & Celebration Hall directly through their website or Instagram for current venue rental pricing. For wedding photography at Buttercup Café, Ngo Photography packages start at $3,800 CAD and include full-day coverage and a professionally edited digital gallery.

How far in advance should I book Buttercup Café?

Buttercup Café hosts a limited number of weddings per season, which means popular summer dates — particularly July and August weekends — book quickly. 12–18 months in advance is recommended for peak dates. Book your photographer at the same time; experienced wedding photographers in Winnipeg and Manitoba fill their calendars at the same pace as sought-after venues.

How much does a Winnipeg wedding photographer cost?

Wedding photography in Winnipeg typically ranges from $2,500 to $6,000+ depending on experience, package inclusions, and coverage hours. At Ngo Photography, wedding packages start at $3,800 CAD and include full-day coverage, a professionally edited digital gallery, and the option to add an engagement session. For a full breakdown of packages and what's included, visit the investment page or send an inquiry.