top of page

Phew! I am pooped and I should really not be on the computer but I just couldn’t resist doing a quick edit on this one image from today’s wedding. Well, actually it was after the craziness of the wedding was over.I absolutely LOVE it when couples are able to prioritise some time away for a few portraits. I double love it when we can head outdoors! It’s just nice. All the madness is over and everyone is gone and you just get some time alone to let it sink in – you’re married! Joy! Celebration! What a glorious thing.

Love it.


I pretty much hit Indian ground running. Three days of shoot down, one more to go for this week, oh and just like 5000 photos begging to be culled, sorted, edited and sent to clients. My laptop is like a ticking bomb about to explode under all the pressure :/I miss Korea! I had such a great trip. It seemed to all have happened so fast! Grace and I started talking about the possibility of me going over to shoot her wedding earlier this year and at the time it seemed kind of impossible… How would we pay for it? I was convinced no country would give me – single, female, 25 year old “self employed” with very little money in her bank account and no real “job” holding her here – a visa and well it just seemed like a dream. But we slowly started working towards it and wonderful, generous friends came forward to help us with the funds (THANK YOU!!!!) In the process of it all, I managed to get my business registered and became a tax paying professional according to the Indian government. Yay! Such a relief to have that done. I applied for the visa, handing them more paperwork than they were interested in and then waited. And waited. The cynic in me was determined not to get excited until I saw the visa IN my passport and then one fine day, it came! Within two weeks of that, I was heading east to the beautiful country of Korea and to be reunited with Grace – a dear friend from back in the day when we were in boarding school together in Ooty.I loved every bit of it. I soaked in as much of Korean culture as I could and ate as much Korean food (which is incredibly delicious btw) as I could, made some super awesome friends and saw as much as I could and of course witnessed an incredibly beautiful wedding. If the photos are able to convey in a fraction of the amazingness of that wedding, I will be satisfied. 7 days seemed too short but they are 7 days that I am not likely to ever forget.

Here are some photos taken on my phone that kind of sum up the trip. There are important bits missing – like Grace’s wedding!! But there are plenty of those photos coming from my camera when I get around to editing them!


1. Traveling from Daejeon to Seoul by train. Look at those beautiful clean rail tracks! 2. Everything runs on card in Seoul. This is the transport card that Grace lent me to use on the buses and trains. 3. View from the 21st floor of Hanna’s apartment building in Seoul. 4. A menu in English for the “waegugin” at a Chinese-Korean restaurant. 5. At a Folk Flea Market in Seoul. 6. The superfast trains that we used to get everywhere around Seoul! 7. About to watch the famous Nanta show. Probably one of my favourite things we did in Seoul. 8. Delicious Citron Tea at a Korean Tea House. 9. Live music at the Incheon Airport. 10. Wonderful meeting one of my favourite people in the world – Ben Stamper in Seoul!! 11. Sung Hwi and I exhausted and waiting for our train home after a looong day of sight-seeing in Seoul. 12. Sunset at Hong Kong Airport. 13. My all-time favourite – Kimbap! 14. A man-made stream running through one of the main business districts in Seoul. 15. Waiting at Hong Kong Airport. 


Hello there, I am back in Daejeon after gallivanting all around Seoul with some excellent guides (super awesome friends of Grace). Seoul is mind-blowingly BIG and diverse. I have some really great memories from the city and I even happened to ‘bump’ into a really dear friend Ben Stamper who just happened to be there at the same time! He lives in the US so it was pretty awesome how we got to meet in this part of the world. I have loads of photos to share from Seoul but thought I’d start by catching up on this photos I took in Daejeon on my first day.

I stayed with Grace in her dorm room at KAIST University’s campus and that’s where these photos start.

One of the first things that I noticed and loved about Korean culture is how people greet each other. When you enter a restaurant, everyone chimes in to say “An-Nyong-Ha-Sye-Yo” which is basically the equivalent of a ‘Namaste’ in India. And then when you leave you are greeted too. I love that. It just feels so warm! You are noticed and appreciated even if you are a stranger.

Just outside Grace’s dorm.

This is Grace trying to make a decision as to which direction we should go.

My first time trying out hard-core Sushi. Well, as hard-core as it gets in Korea.

Cafe’s are the ‘in’ thing.



Trying to make a plan for the day.



See that warm smile? Love it!

Everyone is so well-dressed!




Love the organised traffic.

Zebra crossings actually mean something here :P

Cool graffiti on the wall at one the cafes that we went to.


Sung Hwi! She also went to school with us but was in the year below. Sung-Hwi showed me around Seoul on my second-day there.

Tina Nandi Photography | ©2022 Priyanka (Tina) Nandi

bottom of page