Have been working hard mastering lightroom to invoke a different processing style than I have before, with a view to matching a processing to each weddings style rather than having a 'standard' preset.
Been thinking about that, young feller, and I wonder if it might bite you in the bum. I could well have got hold of the wrong end of the stick, but isn't there a danger that your blog/portfolio/samples might end up looking all over the shop processing-wise? And what if the way you process a wedding isn't what the couple were expecting, based on what they liked when they booked you?
But whatever, about that blog post of yours ...
You've got some nice snaps in there, despite some of them being way too contrived/corny/dated for my taste. Procession shot's lovely, and the dreaded faked signing's done as well as any punter has a right to expect. Was the paper planes confetti-substitute shot down to your consummate skill and perfect timing, or just luck and a quick burst?
That ring on finger shot is well caught, but next time you're lined up like that and you realise you have a significant player in the background, shoot it like you did then instantly rotate to portrait and see if that works like it usually does
Ref the couple going walkies snaps, are they all long shots, or just these three in the blog post?
Funnily enough, the only two I'd have binned as soon as I saw them are the second one in and the second to last. I'd wager a quid any day that 95% of people looking at the murky road and hedge picture will be thinking "wtf?", and the second to last is proof that any picture dominated by an OOF subject that's also blown out will always look like one of Uncle Bob's.
On the strength of that blog post, you seem to be far happier when you're in control of things to a greater or lesser extent, but I'm sure the PJ/Reportidge™ will catch up as you get more experience. Meanwhile, you might usefully work on checking your backgrounds more before pressing that button. I'm guessing that you were very limited as to where you could stand during the ceremony (because if you weren't, I don't really understand why you were where you were at times), but even so, a bit more care/experience would have easily improved matters in, for example, both shots of the reading and the first one of the vows.
One final thought. Given that you're OK with the setup shots, don't forget that there's no reason why you can't influence the informal stuff when it'd make your life easier or improve the snap you're after ...
HTH a bit.