I have known the work of Kimberley Kufaas for a long time: bighouse ceremonies lit by firelight, quiet moments unfolding along misty beaches, coastal storms rolling in behind newly married couples, and portraits that feel shaped directly by the land itself. Her romantic wedding imagery across rugged landscapes, especially her work as a North Vancouver Island Wedding Photographer, carries a sense of realism and atmosphere that is unmistakably hers. Couples appear rooted in place whether she photographs them on windswept cliffs, tide-worn beaches, remote forest hikes, or within the thick fog that often settles over the North Island.
We are incredibly excited to have Kimberley Kufaas join Folklore Wedding Company as one of our team photographers. Her presence strengthens the collaborative spirit at the heart of our collective, bringing a grounded, culturally rooted, and deeply artistic storytelling approach to the team. Her profile within Folklore reflects not only her skill but the perspective she brings as someone shaped by land, lineage, and community.
To truly understand her work as a Vancouver Island Wedding Photographer, it helps to know where she comes from. Born and raised on the northern tip of Vancouver Island, Kimberley’s lineage spans Kwakiutl territory in T’sakis (Fort Rupert) and ʼNa̱mg̱is territory in ‘Ya̱lis (Alert Bay – Cormorant Island) through her mother, and Norwegian and Métis ancestry through her father. Her upbringing, surrounded by family, community gatherings, coastal weather patterns, and cultural life, forms the foundation beneath everything she creates. These influences appear in the way she sees light, the way she understands ceremony, and the way she moves with couples, always attuned to place and meaning.
This is what makes her wedding work so distinctive.
Kimberley Kufaas does not arrive at a wedding simply to take photographs. Instead, she brings lived experience of land, community, and the responsibility of witnessing with care. Her images reflect the landscape she grew up within, the cultural values she carries, and the understanding that storytelling can hold meaning not only for the present moment but for generations. The storms, the forests, the families, the big houses, and the quiet pauses all shape her creative vision. She approaches weddings patiently, respectfully, and with a deep sensitivity to what matters most.
As we spoke for this piece, it became clear that Kimberley does not photograph from the outside looking in. She photographs from within, guided by relationship, responsibility, and belonging. What follows is a weaving together of our voices, her insights, and the work she brings to Folklore Wedding Company as one of the most grounded and culturally connected Indigenous Vancouver Island Wedding Photographer on Vancouver Island.
Growing Up on North Vancouver Island: Coastlines, Rain, and an Early Education in Light
When Kimberley describes her childhood on the North Island, she speaks with clarity rather than romanticism. In fact, she explains how she learned to see by watching weather roll in from a distance over the water, and in doing so, she absorbed atmosphere long before she ever picked up a camera. Growing up in Port Hardy, she noticed the subtle shifts in light, the texture of heavy clouds, and the way the coast feels different hour by hour.
Folks often assume she grew up hiking mountains or chasing rugged adventure, yet she quickly corrects that story. “I was not the classic outdoorsy, hiking kid,” she told me, laughing. “Being deeply invested in soccer, dance, and artistic activities. I was not the outdoor stereotype people imagine.”
“Growing up here, you just learn to embrace the rain”
Still, the land shaped her quietly. “Growing up here, you just learn to embrace the rain,” she shared. “You do not get a choice. We’re built a little different up here. I spent endless hours beachcombing or wandering the shoreline, searching for the less accessed areas. I loved watching storms roll in and taking drives with my dad to see the waves crashing on the (Thomas) point. Those moments shaped how I see the world now. We don’t melt — we just get a little rusty.”
Returning Home
Only after returning home from her first year of college did she realize how deeply the place had shaped her. “That is when everything shifted,” she said. “I realized how special this place is. I started exploring more and felt connected to the land in a new way.”
That relationship with environment flows directly into her wedding photography. Kimberley treats the land not as a backdrop but as a participant. “When I photograph couples, I think of the image like an art piece,” she explained. “The landscape sets the tone. The people become part of it. The environment belongs in their story.”
Heritage and Identity: Returning to What Has Always Been There
Her story is shaped by her Indigenous identity and by the reality of being light-skinned, an experience that encouraged observation, neutrality, and caution as a child.
She grounded our conversation by naming her home first. “Being Kwakwaka’wakw, my roots are here on the North Island,” she said. “I grew up surrounded by culture, by many reserves, and by my family. But it took getting older to understand just how meaningful that was.”
Growing up in a small town as a light-skinned Indigenous kid came with challenges. “I didn’t fully fit with the Indigenous kids, and I didn’t fully fit with the white kids either,” she told me. “there were times I was bullied by both sides. I stayed quiet and floated in the middle. You could usually find me in art class — it felt like the safest place to be.”
“Learning our language with her grounded me,”
Her reconnection began around fifteen, when she attended language classes with her grandmother. “Learning our language with her grounded me,” she shared. “It reminded me who I am and the wealth our culture holds. Reconnecting isn’t simple — there’s beauty and pride, but also trauma, responsibility, and a lot of emotion. I move in and out of it depending on what I can hold.”
That shift transformed her photography. “I hid behind my camera for years,” she said. “People saw pretty photos but nothing about me. When I started sharing who I am and where I come from, my work changed. It became about storytelling and belonging.”
Today, as an Indigenous Photographer, she brings that lineage into every ceremony, elopement, and portrait.
Inside the Big House: Firelight, Smoke, Ceremony, and Cultural Memory
Some of Kimberley Kufaas’s most meaningful work happens inside big houses along the coast of B.C. These spaces, illuminated by firelight, filled with smoke and drumbeats, hold layers of history, ceremony, and emotion. When she describes photographing in them, her voice softens, as though she’s stepping back into the space itself.
“The big house is cinematic before you even lift your camera,” she said. “The light is low, the fire is crackling, the smoke is moving. People gather with intention. Nothing is staged. You are witnessing something important.”
“Every ceremony now is an act of strength,”
She views this work not as documentation but as continuation. “These photos help tell our collective story,” she told me. “They show our communities gathering, lifting up our young people, celebrating each other. These images help the next generation see their worth. There is healing in that.”Not long ago, the potlatch ban attempted to silence these gatherings. “Every ceremony now is an act of strength,” she said. “The fact that we can gather freely matters. Photography becomes part of remembering — part of carrying these moments forward.”
A Versatile Artist: Documenting Lives, Not Just Moments, What it means to be a North Vancouver Island Wedding Photographer
Living in a remote community has shaped Kimberley Kufaas into a multi-focused artist. Photographers on the North Island rarely work in narrow lanes; they document life because they are part of it.
“Up here, with around 4,500 people, you do not survive by doing only one thing,” she said. “You show up where you’re needed, weddings, babies, cultural work, landscapes, tourism, community events. You do everything.”
Cherished Projects.
Some of her most cherished projects are the long-term ones, including documenting her relative’s years-long language dissertation. “I’ve photographed her through so many seasons,” she shared. “Her pregnancies, her kids, her celebrations, her work to keep our language alive. Those images supported her schooling. It’s not just photography. It’s a record of resilience.”
That understanding of continuity carries into her wedding work as well. Couples are not passing clients; they’re people whose stories deserve patience and sincerity.

Returning to Weddings and Finding Home in Folklore
Before joining Folklore Wedding Company, Kimberley Kufaas stepped back from weddings. Her small town hobby had grown into a business faster than she expected, and the pace left her exhausted.
“My calendar had been booked solid for years,” she said. “I needed to ground myself again and reconnect with why I started.” Eventually, she realized that she still loved weddings — especially intimate celebrations in remote and lesser-known places.
When Folklore reached out, she approached the conversation with intention. Once she said yes, something clicked. “I felt excited again,” she shared. “It felt like coming home to something I loved, but in a healthier, more collaborative way.”
The collective structure spoke directly to her values. “Folklore is a community,” she said. “There’s no competition. We uplift each other. We collaborate. It feels good to be part of that.”
Then she added with a grin, “And the voice notes instead of emails? Life-changing.”
Why Kimberley Kufaas Work Matters to Folklore Wedding Company
Kimberley’s photography is shaped by land, culture, community, weather, and memory. She creates images that feel lived in and deeply rooted. Her work as an Indigenous Wedding Photographer brings cultural fluency and emotional depth, while her role as a North Vancouver Island Wedding Photographer infuses her images with rugged beauty and atmospheric light.
We are honoured to have her as part of our team. if you’re interested in learning more about Kimberly’s weddings with Folklore Weddings please check out her profile. Also head here to learn more about North Vancouver Island





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