February 26, 2011

Becoming a Wedding Photographer

Often times we, as wedding vendors hear from people stating that they want to become a wedding photographer, DJ, florist, wedding planner and so on.  Over the next several months we will feature entries on becoming a wedding _______ (florist, DJ, etc.) written by current professionals in the field . We will start this series with ‘Becoming a Wedding Photographer’, contributed by Monica of Family Affair Photography.

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Many times I get the impression that those wanting to get into wedding photography think it’s an easy way to make big money and that it’s going to be one big party.  Before I go into ‘becoming a wedding photographer’ I’m going to share how I ‘fell’ into this profession.  It actually started with an offer to photograph my nieces wedding.  I refused several times, they repeatedly offered and finally sweetened the deal and I said yes. 

Immediately, I started reading everything I could get my hands on about wedding photography, and I also spent a considerable amount of time studying the work of other wedding photographers.   The exhilaration, the adrenalin rush of the wedding day is what inspired and motivated me into starting my own business.  I think to this day that it was my sheer eagerness and JOY of the field that propelled me and not aspirations of making big money or parties.  When I talk to other successful wedding photographers I often hear the same thing, this is a career that brings them joy and often times the first weddings were those of friends or family.

Since that first wedding, I have learned a lot from experience and from talking to other wedding professionals who were willing to offer some guidance.

Let’s get this out there:  Great camera’s don’t make great photographers!  Learn photography before anything else.  A wedding photographer is responsible for capturing the most precious moments in life, and a wedding is NOT the place to learn photography!  As a wedding photographer you are expected to know your camera intimately, to be a master of your chosen craft.  Unfortunately having a new camera doesn’t automatically make you an efficient and reliable photographer.  Learn composition and develop your artistic vision. 

Things don’t end once you’ve photographed a wedding.  In fact it’s after the wedding that the work starts.  I’ve heard from several photographers who have said that for every hour shooting at a wedding it will require about 2 additional hours in post production work.  This means learning and mastering digital workflow, processing the RAW images, file management, image correction, color management and enhancement.  Even great images often need a little something more. It’s pretty much expected you’ll be doing some correction. Don’t think you can shoot and burn and get a reputation for great work.

LOVE photography more than anything else.  Don’t come into the wedding photography field filled with aspirations of making BIG money.  While it’s true, there are many successful wedding photographers that make a lot of money.  Many of those photographers are also successful speakers, teachers, mentors, etc. to other wedding photographers.  According to the Professional Photographers of America, the average photographer in America makes about $24,000.00 a year. 

When you start photographing a wedding learn to focus on QUALITY vs. quantity.  Is there really a need to take 2000 photos per hour?  No bride is going to want the quantity, they much rather have the heartfelt and beautiful images.  Think about your shots, look for the special moments.  Keep your eyes and heart open to capture the unique and beautiful moments that naturally occur during the day.  Remember that long after you have moved on, your photographs will last forever and will someday be viewed by future generations of that family. 

During the wedding day, keep moving even if your tired of being on your feet for 8 plus hours, you need to be ready and alert what is happening around you.  There is a fine line you need to learn as to when you hide and become ninja like and when you get out and interact with the guests.  Knowing this will produce some wonderful images of the day.  Experience is going to be your best instructor on this.  Starting off as an assistant for a photographer would give you an edge on this, you can learn by observing the pro and by asking them questions after the event.

There is an old rule for the successful photographer and it’s one I admit that I still struggle with to this day.  The rule is “80% business, 20% photography”  Sometimes it feels like it’s 90% business and only 10% photography.  Unfortunately if you want to make photography your business you have to be much more than a photographer while still excelling at offering your customers great images.  If you want to get hired you need to sell yourself, make your customers happy and promote your abilities.  Being a great photographer is much more than clicking that shutter!  If you aren’t ready to handle the business end of photography, you can always work with other photographers.

Lastly learn something new everyday by taking classes, reading or getting out with your camera.  Join different photography groups.  There are many professional photography organizations that offer different levels of membership based on your skills and knowledge.  Some worth checking out:  Professional Photographers of America (PPA), and Wedding Portrait Professionals International (WPPI).  Attend their workshops, seminars, and meetings.  Learn and share tips, techniques from other professionals in the industry.  Never stop learning. Always practice, observe and study.

There is so much to share when talking about becoming a wedding photographer.  It IS a joyous and rewarding career.  If you decide to pursue wedding photography, always remember that as a wedding photographer you’re in a service business.  Always serve your clients with care and attention to detail that you would expect on your own wedding day or daily life for that matter!

February 10, 2011

Exploring the Possiblities

Puget Sound Wedding Professionals is proud to announce to upcoming events that are being produced by a couple of our members.   The first is the inaugural Wedding Walk Tacoma on Sunday February 20th, followed by the Bridal 4-1-1 workshops that will be held in Tukwila and Tacoma in March.

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                Wedding Walk Tacoma

Wedding Walk Tacoma is a one day event that will introduce prospective brides, grooms, wedding attendants and their family and friends to Tacoma, as a one-stop shopping destination for weddings, while sampling excellent food, wonderful beverages and touring Tacoma’s most beautiful places to get married.

Brides, grooms, friends and family will walk the Downtown Tacoma Business District, stopping at the Marriott and Pacific Grill Event Center,  then walking down Pacific Avenue to the Tacoma Art Museum, Union Station, and the History Museum before crossing the Chihuly Bridge to the Museum of Glass on the water.
There are approximately 60 premier businesses and sponsors participating from categories such as floral design, formal wear, hotel and banquet halls, invitations and printing, jewelers, photographers, salons and spas, shoes and accessories, and bakeries.

Participants can choose to walk, ride in a limo, or hop on Tacoma’s Link light rail to the featured venues. After visiting all locations, participants will be entered to win a Grand Prize Raffle.

http://www.weddingwalktacoma.com

 

   Bridal 4-1-1 workshops

                    Bridal 4-1-1 Workshops

  • Wedding Tips from Professionals
  • Planning Advice for your wedding
  • Q & A with up to 16 different vendors
  • Wedding Checklists, Giveaways, DIY Advice

If you are planning your wedding and have questions or concerns, these workshops are for you! Every bride has questions and sometimes no one to ask. Come listen to wedding professionals with answers. The workshops are designed to help you learn to interview potential vendors such as photographers, florists, DJs, wedding planners, officiants, caterers, etc. The workshops will provide you with information to make wedding planning decisions with ease, choose the best wedding dress or wedding flowers for you, and connect you with wedding professionals with DIY solutions.

Each workshop is a series of four 2 hour sessions with up to four wedding vendor presentations each session. Sign up for one session or all four. The first workshops will be held in Tacoma and Seattle/Tukwila starting in March 2011 . Future workshops are planned for Auburn, Gig Harbor, Sumner and other upcoming locations .

$10.00 per person for each session through January 31, 2011. Starting February 1, $15.00 per person.

Call 206-601-6957 or email nancy@simplycelebrations.com

For more information and to buy workshops, go to www.bridal4-1-1workshops.com

February 6, 2011

Unusually Unusual

We recently asked our members of the Puget Sound Wedding Professionals group to share memories from weddings that had an unusual, different or creative twist on their event.

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I'm not sure how common this practice is, but I was exposed to it for the first time last year and thought it was a great idea.  After receiving their engagement session images, my clients spent an afternoon at a local winery where they took part in a wine tasting and then made small batches of their own unique wines for the upcoming summer wedding.  The winery tended their wine until the fermentation process was complete, at which point the couple returned to bottle, cork, and label the wine.  They were able to select several photos from our engagement session to create gorgeous bottle labels.  The guests loved the personal touch and everybody wanted to take a bottle home!  These wines would make great guest favors or bridal party gifts as well.  Two Puget Sound Wineries I know of that provide this service are Classic Winemaker's in Lacey and Castle Bridge Winery in Kent.  

Katie Cann-McTaggart

R e d  S p a r r o w  P h o t o g r a p h y

www.redsparrowphoto.com

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We photographed a wedding several years ago where the guests at each table had to sing a love song of their choice before they would get released to the buffet line.  Most of the tables would all sing a verse together while other tables would let one brave singer sing solo and allowing that person to go to the head of the line. 

The bride and groom, along with all the guests were laughing and enjoying the selection of songs, some were sung off key, some with verses wrong, but it made for a fun way to get released to the buffet line.

We didn’t hear any objections to the singing from any of the guests, even the ones without singing voices since this was a group participation activity.

Monica

Family Affair Photography

www.familyaffairphotography.com

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Here are two great unique ideas that a bride of mine an I came up with. The boxes that look like a wedding cake are for cards that guests bring to the wedding. It was super cute and different than the usual basket etc. The other was the wall banner. What to do with a big ugly wall? Her theme was monograms so her friend painted the plain muslin and hung it on a dowel and then we up-lit. It was a great backdrop to the head table instead of the plain wall.

 
Melanie Benson

Melanie Benson Floral Design

http://melaniebensonfloral.com

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I’d love to see a wedding catered by one of Seattle’s award winning food trucks – www.marinationmobile.com. They have the BEST food. The wedding could take place at a nice outdoor location with a place for the truck. The reception area could be decked out Hawaiian – Korean Style. Paper lanterns and grass skirts! Bright colors. I think I would be a fun, casual, delicious event. Maybe I’ll do it for my birthday!

www.marinationmobile.com.

Cheers! Rachel

www.rachelrauschphotography.com

www.photomusela.blogspot.com

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1. We have an upcoming wedding that will have the ring bearer carrying a pillow with the bride’s ring and the flower girl carrying a pillow with the groom’s ring.

2. I’m seeing more rainbow weddings. The latest example is a bride that picked black dresses but then gave her bridesmaids a swatch of ribbon in either yellow, orange, pink, purple or blue and asked them to buy whatever shoe they wanted in that color. Their flowers will be that same color and the groomsman they are walking with will have a tie that is predominately that color and a matching boutonniere.

Barb

Top Hat

  http://www.tophatfw.com/index.html

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A while ago I got to photograph an Afghani wedding.  I also did the engagement party, which, though these are common in their culture, was bigger than most regular weddings I shoot! So while the music, food, and traditions were all different and a lot of fun, there was one in particular that was REALLY enjoyable to watch.  Dance battle for the cake knife.  When it came time to cut the cake, the groom's cousin danced onto the dance floor carrying the knife. Every attempt at retrieving the knife on Ajmal's part resulted in a graceful twirl away and no knife!  Thankfully, as the night had progressed, Ajmal's parents had been stuffing his pockets with moderately sized bills. Very quickly, a rhythm was established to the dance-- bribe, rejection. Bigger bribe, further rejection! By the time she decided to give in, I counted the dancer to have made somewhere between $150-$250!

And all for a piece of cake. I hope it tasted good!  I have to tell ya, I WOULD love to see this at more weddings.  (And maybe more traditional Afghani food!)

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Jason Comerford Photography
http://www.jasoncomerford.com
http://jcomerfordphoto.blogspot.com/

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Feathers and fishnet are a few other popular trends brides tend to overlook. Remember ladies, your the star of the show!

photo

The Bella Look

Http://www.thebellalook.com

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Popcorn stand. Latte stand.

Angie

www.angiedphotography.com

http://angiedphotography.blogspot.com/

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Big Day

One of my best girlfriends got married at the Pantages in downtown Tacoma.  The ceremony was on the stage and the reception in the gorgeous lobby. That made it a unique wedding but she had other touches that made it a wedding to remember. They had decided early in planning they didn’t want a traditional cake so when it came to that reception moment for cake cutting the D.J. quieted everyone down and told us to listen. Off in the distance we could hear  the ice cream truck music and it was getting closer! The truck pulled right up to the door and everyone was invited to go out and pick whatever they wanted. It was such fun!

Barb VH

Top Hat formal wear    

  http://www.tophatfw.com/

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I recently saw this at a wedding, they had a ‘ring warming’ ceremony.  During a ring warming, the couple’s wedding rings are passed among their guests, who are asked to say a prayer or make a wish for the couple over the rings while holding them.  This intimate exchange injects all of the loving energy of the couple’s friends and family into the rings that they’ll be wearing for a lifetime.

It makes for a very inclusive element of the ceremony and further connects the couple with their loved ones in attendance. 

Nancy

Simply Celebrations

http://simplycelebrations.com/

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Many weddings will have guests throwing bird seed or blowing bubbles as the couple exits and leaves the reception. 

At a wedding we photographed, the wedding party went out and stuffed the get-a-way car with helium balloons.  So, before the couple could make their escape, they had to let all the balloons escape from the car!  It had all the guests cheering and laughing.

ballon release

Monica

Family Affair Photography

www.familyaffairphotography.com

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In reality all weddings are unique in their very own way, just as no two snowflakes are the same, no two weddings are the same either.