gsgary
Been spending a lot of time on here!
- Joined
- Oct 31, 2008
- Messages
- 16,143
- Reaction score
- 3,004
- Location
- Chesterfield UK
- Can others edit my Photos
- Photos OK to edit
OH NO I'M OUT OF HERE
because i will "PUT FOOT IN MOUTH"

To Whitney,
Doing a wedding photo shoot is non-trivial. Youre getting the reaction that youre getting because your degree of knowledge and preparation seems equivalent to someone having a hammer and a drill, being asked to build a house for a relative who cant afford to hire a real architect/contractor.
If you have 9 months, then you need to acquire a few things:
1. Experience with your equipment (and perhaps some new equipment).
2. Experience shooting in the typical environment
3. Experience with light modifiers (flash, etc.).
4. Knowledge of basic composition, posing.
5. Knowledge of post-processing
Perhaps, the starting point is to look at various wedding portfolios (there are many on the web), and various wedding publications, and get a sense of the kind of images that are common, and discuss these with your customers. Your goal here is to get a sense of what they expect and to figure out the minimum deliverables. If all they want and expect are two shots of them at the alter, great. Chances are, they'll want more.
Once youve got a clearer idea of the target, you need to scout out suitable places which replicate the shooting conditions you will have and try to shoot the photos using a willing (or susceptible-to-blackmail) volunteer. Then look hard at what the results are and decide where you need to improve.
For example, you mentioned that the church in which youll be shooting has fluorescent lights and dark woodwork. This means that unless you know how to adjust the color balance, youll have all kind of weird tones. The dark woodwork will skew your cameras lightmeter, and will most probably cause you to overexpose. This means that you will need to get a good idea of the exposure to use (you need to expose for the highlights), and then lock that in by using the manual exposure.
If there is just not enough light for you to get decent images, you have options: a flash (assuming one is allowed at the wedding), a faster lens than what you have ($$$), and/or a camera body which can handle high ISO values with minimal noise (again, $$$ or rent $$$), and/or additional lighting equipment (more $$$). Learning to use a flash is a non-trivial exercise as well, as you need to figure out which flash mode you need to use, the amount of power it has relative to your shooting distance, whether a flash modifier/diffuser is needed, etc., etc.
Although there is usually not a lot of movement during a wedding, there is a lot of variation between the lightest areas and the darkest areas. You need photographic skill to ensure that all relevant parts of the scene are recorded with enough detail. That skill is obtained by learning and lots of practice.
If youre the only photographer at the wedding, youll need to be in many places at the same time. Since that is usually difficult for ordinary mortals, youll probably need to work out a script with your customers in terms of the shots that you will make (including your position, the angle, the degree of zoom or closeup), so that you can move smoothly through the sequence without becoming the scene yourself. Experienced photographers usually know where they need to be for each part of the ceremony, but you wont have the benefit of that experience.
After all is done, theres the processing of the pictures, weeding out the out-of-focus, under and over-exposed ones, ditching the ones where the composition or posing is unflattering, etc., and preparing a deliverable (prints? CD? DVD?) for your customers. Again, post-processing is non-trivial, especially with all the tools that are available.
One piece of advice that I can give you, is to try and get invited to as many weddings as you can, either as the friend with a camera or as a second shooter. Watch what the pros do and borrow all the good ideas you can (thats called hands-on-learning). Then try to replicate what you saw them do (that is called really hands-on-learning).
Remember also Murphys Law. You know, Anything and everything that can go wrong, will. The counter to Ms. Murphys machinations is preparation and anticipation. Backup equipment, backup shooters, backup batteries, backup memory cards, backup hard drives on which you will store your photos, etc.
Thats why you have gotten a less-than-stellar welcome there is a large gap (or so it seems to us from your posts) between where you are now, and where you need to be to successfully and reliably deliver on one of the most important days in the lives of your customers. It can be done, but it is, as Ive said before non-trivial.
PM being sent.Feel free to comment in a PM I need all the help I can get.
You suck.Start welcoming it. I get told I suck all the time, but that's what helps us to improve
(Well... the "you suck, but here's what you should do next time..." type comments anyway. :lmao: )
It is a small cermony and they don't have the money to hire a professional.
If this is really the case, then perhaps one of the best gifts the families could give the bride and groom would be to pay for a professional photographer. There will be plenty of time for them to get things like silverware, dining sets, and all that other stuff the newlyweds typically get... but they'll never have the opportunity to go back and re-shoot their big day.
BTW, letting everyone know that you are not getting paid and that they are relatives probably would have saved you from a lot of flaming.
How do you leap to the conclusion that the wedding the OP is planning to shoot will be as trailer-trash low-class as the people you associate with, and therefor not worthy of the best photography can offer?Here's a little STFU for ya... My wife's family is a bunch of redneck Michigan hicks. It's like little Alabama held in America's pinky. Her one aunt was married in a barn that fell down 3 months later.
Another aunt...I personally did the photography for her wedding. I arrive what I thought was a little early, and the best man, and the groom were outside, with suit jackets on....and blue jeans. As soon as me and my wife get there, they walk up to the front, there's like 15 people there total. They get up to the front, and no music nothing...her aunt starts walking down the aisle.
All this took like 5 minutes upon arrival...no joke. And ten minutes after the pastor came out of her study...we were in the car and leaving to their reception.
Point being...with the divorce rate in America the way that it is...there's enough weddings that aren't that special, and the worst ameteur couldn't screw them up.
Thank you very much
These negative people are just making me step up my game even more and when the photos turn out enough the bride is happy I'll come back and let them know![]()
It will take more than "study". You'll need to do many test shoots to fill in all the gaps in your current understanding of the daunting technical issues you face.To Whitney,
Doing a wedding photo shoot is non-trivial. Youre getting the reaction that youre getting because your degree of knowledge and preparation seems equivalent to someone having a hammer and a drill, being asked to build a house for a relative who cant afford to hire a real architect/contractor.
If you have 9 months, then you need to acquire a few things:
1. Experience with your equipment (and perhaps some new equipment).
2. Experience shooting in the typical environment
3. Experience with light modifiers (flash, etc.).
4. Knowledge of basic composition, posing.
5. Knowledge of post-processing
Perhaps, the starting point is to look at various wedding portfolios (there are many on the web), and various wedding publications, and get a sense of the kind of images that are common, and discuss these with your customers. Your goal here is to get a sense of what they expect and to figure out the minimum deliverables. If all they want and expect are two shots of them at the alter, great. Chances are, they'll want more.
Once youve got a clearer idea of the target, you need to scout out suitable places which replicate the shooting conditions you will have and try to shoot the photos using a willing (or susceptible-to-blackmail) volunteer. Then look hard at what the results are and decide where you need to improve.
For example, you mentioned that the church in which youll be shooting has fluorescent lights and dark woodwork. This means that unless you know how to adjust the color balance, youll have all kind of weird tones. The dark woodwork will skew your cameras lightmeter, and will most probably cause you to overexpose. This means that you will need to get a good idea of the exposure to use (you need to expose for the highlights), and then lock that in by using the manual exposure.
If there is just not enough light for you to get decent images, you have options: a flash (assuming one is allowed at the wedding), a faster lens than what you have ($$$), and/or a camera body which can handle high ISO values with minimal noise (again, $$$ or rent $$$), and/or additional lighting equipment (more $$$). Learning to use a flash is a non-trivial exercise as well, as you need to figure out which flash mode you need to use, the amount of power it has relative to your shooting distance, whether a flash modifier/diffuser is needed, etc., etc.
Although there is usually not a lot of movement during a wedding, there is a lot of variation between the lightest areas and the darkest areas. You need photographic skill to ensure that all relevant parts of the scene are recorded with enough detail. That skill is obtained by learning and lots of practice.
If youre the only photographer at the wedding, youll need to be in many places at the same time. Since that is usually difficult for ordinary mortals, youll probably need to work out a script with your customers in terms of the shots that you will make (including your position, the angle, the degree of zoom or closeup), so that you can move smoothly through the sequence without becoming the scene yourself. Experienced photographers usually know where they need to be for each part of the ceremony, but you wont have the benefit of that experience.
After all is done, theres the processing of the pictures, weeding out the out-of-focus, under and over-exposed ones, ditching the ones where the composition or posing is unflattering, etc., and preparing a deliverable (prints? CD? DVD?) for your customers. Again, post-processing is non-trivial, especially with all the tools that are available.
One piece of advice that I can give you, is to try and get invited to as many weddings as you can, either as the friend with a camera or as a second shooter. Watch what the pros do and borrow all the good ideas you can (thats called hands-on-learning). Then try to replicate what you saw them do (that is called really hands-on-learning).
Remember also Murphys Law. You know, Anything and everything that can go wrong, will. The counter to Ms. Murphys machinations is preparation and anticipation. Backup equipment, backup shooters, backup batteries, backup memory cards, backup hard drives on which you will store your photos, etc.
Thats why you have gotten a less-than-stellar welcome there is a large gap (or so it seems to us from your posts) between where you are now, and where you need to be to successfully and reliably deliver on one of the most important days in the lives of your customers. It can be done, but it is, as Ive said before non-trivial.
Thanks for all the information given here. I will definetly look into and study in the next 9 months. As I have stated before I attend the church were the cermony is being held so I have plenty of time to study out some of the lighting situation and we also have spotlights availble and I think those will help tremendously.
How do you leap to the conclusion that the wedding the OP is planning to shoot will be as trailer-trash low-class as the people you associate with, and therefor not worthy of the best photography can offer?
Good one Buckster!
Here is my first small wedding. Only 11 people total! It is still classy.
How do you leap to the conclusion that the wedding the OP is planning to shoot will be as trailer-trash low-class as the people you associate with, and therefor not worthy of the best photography can offer?
Good one Buckster!
Here is my first small wedding. Only 11 people total! It is still classy.
Cool stuff, nice work but one question...did that fox really just show up to the wedding? Guess you had 12 guests. I can definitely say that I never had interesting wildlife at any weddings I've ever shot (unless you count the bride's father).
I hope you don't plan on just using the kit lens for a wedding.. it limits you greatlyMy father in law is getting married again (75). I am looking around and searching the net for examples. His wife will wear apricot. There will obviously be big group photos and it will not be the typical "white" wedding.
Anyone with ideas/sites, etc to visit?
I have a Canon EOS 450D with a 18-55mm lens. I usually shoot at Av, I like ISO 100-200.
Thanks for advice or directing me to a good site!!
I hope you don't plan on just using the kit lens for a wedding.. it limits you greatlyMy father in law is getting married again (75). I am looking around and searching the net for examples. His wife will wear apricot. There will obviously be big group photos and it will not be the typical "white" wedding.
Anyone with ideas/sites, etc to visit?
I have a Canon EOS 450D with a 18-55mm lens. I usually shoot at Av, I like ISO 100-200.
Thanks for advice or directing me to a good site!!