Check it! Wedding post... (and new bloggie!)
heatherfeather
Registered Users Posts: 2,738 Major grins
Thanks to everyone and their amazing input... I have my new Wordpress + prophoto blog up and running! Next up: get the old Smuggy site to match.
Here are a couple photos from last weekend's wedding and my first blog post:
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6.
7. Holly has the most unique color of eyes that I have ever seen. I actually looked it up and they are called Amber. Hate to point it out, but with her beauty, fair skin and amber eyes, she could easily be a member of Twilight, lol.
8.
C & C would be most welcome on both the pics and the blog! :lust
Here are a couple photos from last weekend's wedding and my first blog post:
1.
2.
3.
4.
5.
6.
7. Holly has the most unique color of eyes that I have ever seen. I actually looked it up and they are called Amber. Hate to point it out, but with her beauty, fair skin and amber eyes, she could easily be a member of Twilight, lol.
8.
C & C would be most welcome on both the pics and the blog! :lust
0
Comments
Cheers,
Colby
Gary
Unsharp at any Speed
Heather, these are magical. The only possible query is on 8 - it just seems slightly low contrast and neither desat nor full colour - I find myself wanting just a tiny bit more contrast (or darkness, maybe?) to bring out her features (and possibly tone down the almost-a-hotspot on her shoulder)
Wall of Lost Soles is hilarious!
You got girl...............
Sam
Thanks for sharing!!!!
Matt
Bodies: Canon 5d mkII, 5d, 40d
Lenses: 24-70 f2.8L, 70-200 f4.0L, 135 f2L, 85 f1.8, 50 1.8, 100 f2.8 macro, Tamron 28-105 f2.8
Flash: 2x 580 exII, Canon ST-E2, 2x Pocket Wizard flexTT5, and some lower end studio strobes
I admire your work...and will be following your blogs...good luck. You sure have come a long way in a short time.
Thanks for sharing your work with us.
Educate yourself like you'll live forever and live like you'll die tomorrow.
Ed
www.CottageInk.smugmug.com
NIKON D700
I know! I LOVE her gown. I wish more brides would dare to be different and try something other than poofy, beaded, strapless with tucks. So nice to have something more original.
As to 8, it is pretty darn close to straight out of camera, other than a bit of skin work. Not desaturated in the slightest. I wonder if what you are seeing is the bright background compared to the dark of the woods that the others have. She was in a sunlit clearing for 8 which accounts for how much brighter the background is. My wish is that her expression was stronger, rather than an in between moments look. But, she seriously performed for lots of others, so I am not complaining.
SOOC? I before the Awesomeness.... Wow. Just... wow.
You can see even in your "before" shot - without skin work - that she has this amazing porcelain complexion which the MUA emphasised and with that and the creaminess of the dress and your goooorrrrjjjuussss lighting - well, I'm just blown away. Yum.
They are all great examples of your style, but 6 and 7 REALLY hone in on their classic good looks. 6 being my fave of the set. I have a feeling 8 might run a close second with the same BW treatment.
Now...about the light in #4....how'd ya do it? how'd ya fire it?
I checked you blog. Looks super!
An assistant coulda made a full days work following the ring bearer!!!
Very elegant!
Jeff
-Need help with Dgrin?; Wedding Photography Resources
-My Website - Blog - Tips for Senior Portraiture
Pictures | Website | Blog | Twitter | Contact
@BradfordBen, Thanks!
As to matching the smuggy site to the other, that has taken some doing. The main thing is to get the color codes the same for both.... and then it should flow fairly seamlessly.
It isn't finished, but it is coming along.
Thanks Jeff.
On 4, I had an assistant stand just out of frame to camera left and hold the lightstand to the window (STE2 + 580EXIIs still) and planned on a clone job. It wasn't at all difficult.
Your b&g will be very happy to see these
Gorgeous couple!
IMNSHO #7 is best of the bunch! The eyes really have it! (both bride & groom!)
…but (sorry, you know me!) there's all that space to the left… totally wasted… all the action is in the right half of the frame, which is OK if you're going to fill the left with text (copy space as it's called), but as is, it's crying out for portrait format and crop crop crop! (same goes for #3)
BTW - love the colours, light, and modeling in #7 !!!
In #3 her skin's a bit washed out!
Thanks for sharing!!!!
- Wil
Sorry Will.. gonna have to respectfully disagree. As is obvious.... I am in love with negative space and the rule of 3rds is one of my favorite friends. Also, I do quite a bit of design work with the photos that my clients hire me to do.... and I need all the copy space that I can make. Anyway, I think it is better as is. Even a square crop isn't as dynamic. Ever notice in higher end movies they frame a subject on a third with negative space? In my little world is way more visually interesting to have a subject composed off center.
Ha ha, thanks Ian (for both comments, actually)
+1
I have had to learn to force myself to do nearly everything wedding related in landscape format. Not all.....but surely most.
Shooting this way keeps options open for double spreads and landscape oriented books/albums....which I prefer over the portrait oriented ones. Even a square 10x10 book is landscape when opened. And if you plan to do a slide show...well...doesnt a portrait oriented photo on a widescreen HDTV look like crap!
...not to mention the fact that "portrait orientation only" and "center the subject always" is a clear path to blahville. The rule of thirds and the golden mean are solid composition rules for dynamic composition.
I would change nothing from your routine.:D
...and I was pretty sure you were still using the STE2s IR to trigger (me too). I havent tried much in the way when it comes to "planning to clone" out the source. I was pretty sure you had HAD to have done something like that, but couldnt be positive without asking. I really have zero complaints about the STE2. I have used mine at far farther than the touted max distance, and in situations similar....sort of....to your shot here have found often that facing the red window the opposite direction the signal will often bounce from the subject to the flash and work. I guess, like any other gear, it has limitations, but there is nearly always a way to make it work.:D
Jeff
-Need help with Dgrin?; Wedding Photography Resources
-My Website - Blog - Tips for Senior Portraiture
Here's an example:
Spread the love! Go comment on something!
I also recently switched over to ProPhoto for my blog - replacing my Flash site with ProPhoto template as well and very pleased so far.
Cheers!
David
www.uniqueday.com
YESSSSSSSSSS!! I was thinking something very similar! That dress with her complexion is classic art... especially with Heather behind the camera
Jeff's blahville comment is spot on.
Matt
Bodies: Canon 5d mkII, 5d, 40d
Lenses: 24-70 f2.8L, 70-200 f4.0L, 135 f2L, 85 f1.8, 50 1.8, 100 f2.8 macro, Tamron 28-105 f2.8
Flash: 2x 580 exII, Canon ST-E2, 2x Pocket Wizard flexTT5, and some lower end studio strobes
I was pretty excited when I took that one... but that painter is amazing! Thanks for the seriously high praise. She does remind me of that type of lady, with a really unique beauty with those high cheekbones and regal bearing. She makes the rest of us look like mere humans, lol. The strange thing is... to see her in a casual setting her beauty isn't as overwhelming. My memory of her before the wedding was of a fairly plain lady.... And then... all dolled up, she was as absolute showstopper.
Well apparently everyone is in agreement! Thanks, Lady.
Yes... eventually I'll switch over to the wizards, I think. I have read a ton of reviews about both the poppers and the wizards, and I think I'll go that route. Though I am sort of waiting for the next generation to come out and address the wimpy construction. Meanwhile, the STE2 does pretty darn well. Though I thought I had it fail me last week during a family shoot..... it just wouldn't transmit. Come to find out, it wasn't seated on the hotshoe properly. Yeah, that would do it.
And thanks for the reassurances. It means alot.
Thanks to Mmatt too!
I still have a few kinks to work out... but it is getting there! Not too dificult at all!
Canon 5D MARK II, Canon EOS 450D
Canon 24-70mm f/2.8L, Canon 18-55mm
Canon 50mm 1.8, Canon 75-300mm, Tokina 10-24mm, Sigma 18-200mm