The unofficial photographer
G'day folks.
After shooting a friends wedding last year, I've just shot two in the last month. I'm new at this particular game, and by looking around on this forum, I have an awful lot to learn!
http://www.mcvitty.net/Weddings/Simone-and-Steven
For this wedding, I was a guest and the "unofficial photographer". The groom had a mate and his assistant shoot for most of the day, so I was there at the bride's request, taking candids and (by my choice) trying not to contribute to the flock of camera guys already there...
Happily accepting your feedback!
I'm also curious to know which photos stand out for you, as the bride has raved about some of the photos I thought were only so-so.
Cheers,
Paul
After shooting a friends wedding last year, I've just shot two in the last month. I'm new at this particular game, and by looking around on this forum, I have an awful lot to learn!
http://www.mcvitty.net/Weddings/Simone-and-Steven
For this wedding, I was a guest and the "unofficial photographer". The groom had a mate and his assistant shoot for most of the day, so I was there at the bride's request, taking candids and (by my choice) trying not to contribute to the flock of camera guys already there...
Happily accepting your feedback!
I'm also curious to know which photos stand out for you, as the bride has raved about some of the photos I thought were only so-so.
Cheers,
Paul
0
Comments
What did the bride like?
www.CottageInk.smugmug.com
NIKON D700
I like the unique perspectives shown. Very interesting - makes every image exciting and artistic.
I am often amazed at the images brides often love. One wedding I photographed many years ago in the film days - I was very disappointed with. However, the bride RAVED about them and referred 2 or 3 of her friends who's weddings I ended up photographing as well. So, you just never know what they will like.
http://www.jonathanswinton.com
http://www.swintoncounseling.com
14-24 24-70 70-200mm (vr2)
85 and 50 1.4
45 PC and sb910 x2
http://www.danielkimphotography.com
Natural selection is responsible for every living thing that exists.
D3s, D500, D5300, and way more glass than the wife knows about.
I've enjoyed discovering the pleasures of Lightroom over the last year, and the ease at which you can manipulate/improve/(ruin!) photos.
Picking "my style" is something I certainly haven't found as yet. Any pointers?
As for the bride's favourite, it was number 16, in the group with her sisters. It obviously holds high emotional value for her, as they are all close friends. I just wish I'd "seen" the photo at the time, and taken the flash off the camera and spot-lit them, rather than bouncing and vignetting later... oh well!
As a begginer, I don't know if going for a certain "style", is the best thing to do. Concentrate on getting the best SOOC images and for post processing, just get the images to "pop" a bit while paying careful attention to WB, skin tones, colors, exposure, etc. Get it "correct" and continue that for thousands of images. At some point when you can do "correct" in your sleep, then you have a foundation for developing a "style".
14-24 24-70 70-200mm (vr2)
85 and 50 1.4
45 PC and sb910 x2
http://www.danielkimphotography.com