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At a wedding, fireworks are not décor — they are a scene in their own right. When they start, how densely they run and which song they’re written to: that decides the whole effect. The secret of a good wedding show is not its size but the moment it is placed in — a flawless display fired at the wrong minute leaves less behind than a simple one fired at the right minute.

Where in the night does it land?

Density, not duration

The question couples ask most is “how many minutes”; the right one is “how will it feel”. An audience doesn’t count time — it feels the curve. A short show that overlaps and runs headlong into its finale always beats a long one that spreads the same effects across wide gaps. Long and thin is the programme where the phones come down by the third minute. That is why MESVORA’s wedding shows are designed around a dramatic curve rather than a running time: it rises, it holds, it bursts, it ends.

The song comes first

Music is not a detail; it is the design. The show is written to the piece’s tempo, its beats, its silences and its peak. Change the song and the show is rewritten from scratch — the effects fall somewhere new, and the finale moves with them. If your song is chosen, the design is built on that skeleton; if not, the team decides on your behalf. Name the song early.

The venue, the photographer, the camera

When to start the conversation

The rough rule: start talking the week you fix the date. Through the summer wedding season the Saturdays fill months ahead, and the supply of crews does not grow with demand. Beyond that, the site survey, the design, the permits, the safety plan and the insurance all run together and all take time. Talking weeks ahead leaves you with options; calling at the last moment removes them.

What to ask before you sign

Let’s talk about your wedding date →