I love the way the grasses appear to be blowing in the wind in shot #2. I do see the slight blue tinge in her dress, but that could be eliminated in Selective Color in PS. His skin has a slight magenta-ish bias to it, compared with #1, where he looks tanned.
Shot #1...I can see direct late afternoon sunlight striking the front of his suit jacket,and raking across her left arm...BUT, the processing has this rendered much brighter and lighter...I think this shot could also have been rendered darker, with crisper-looking more naturalistic lighting...but, it also looks okay brightened up like this and made more pastel...."lighter-feeling", more "summery"...still looks acceptable to me.
The nice thing about these though is the lenswork--the use of the telephoto lens and its docusing and framing and aperture selection--all very good! The lens used has nice bokeh, both in the way the out of focus foreground is rendered, then a beautifully sharp,crisp depth of field band that fades very rapidly,and very beautifully into a wonderful background bokeh. There are a few lenses that give this same type of rendering on full-length figures: Nikon's 135mm f/2 Defocus Control, Canon's 135 f/2-L, and Nikon's 200mm f/2 VR. This is really nice lenswork, as it is called; the image processing is a bit different between these two frames, and could be minutely tweaked, but the lenswork, that's very,very solid.