I looked at the lot.
Not to my taste but you seem to have mostly obtained the skin tones you want or at least got close
It's noticeable that in general most of the indoor shots show more detail in the wedding whites. They are too bright in nearly all of the exterior shots. Some have lost all of the detail over too large an area.
Some of the "item" shots, ring, cake etc are NVG. I feel those need a more traditional approach. They need to look better than they did in real life - just like a few of them do. A ring needs to look as good as it did in a jeweler's window. Personally if I shot a pair of shoes I wouldn't chop the top off them.
Some of the blacks are dead solid in at least one shot. That's a complete no no to me and is one of the reason people hire a pro but some people don't even notice.
Your problems all seem to be down to the correct use of curves from raw. The dresses for instance are in the highlight area so can be controlled separately. Combining that with a change of the exposure setting can also help in this area. I don't use Adobe products but you may need to use ACR to do this effectively. There is some old information on this area mostly applying to Nikon but could be of some help here
http://fotogenetic.dearingfilm.com/downloads.html
It also looks like the curves the site provide can be be used in PS. One of them was called the white wedding curve but is now one of the point and shoot curves as it does the same thing. On Canon the mid tones may not need lifting. There is some good advice on the use of curves - simple smooth ones are usually best.
The other thing that can help is the camera profile used. Adobe provide several. Some on here stick to adobe standard but if a lot of shots are being processed it's probably worth trying all of them to see if any speed up workflow.
One thing that can help when people are having problems is to upload a complete raw file to say filebin.net and allow people to work on it and tell you what they did. It's helped me a lot at times but do make sure there is not too much clipping in the shot especially in the dresses. If you upload jpg's on here something around 1500px wide is best but lost / messed up highlights can't be recovered. A lot can usually be done to the rest.
Whoops forgot white balance - the adjustments are likely to change that as well so it's hard to be sure at just what stage that needs to be done. Maybe initially and a final slight touch up. For me camera white balance always gets close.
John
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