How To Be Creative With Wedding Photography
To ask a photographer "How did you get that shot" is like asking a writer to explain how he or she wrote a particular piece of literary work. There really isn't any standard or predefined way - that's just how it is with any creative process.
However, it is my experience that the most important factor in establishing good creative shots for a wedding album is getting acquainted with the couple you're shooting. Try talking with them and establish some rapport so that they feel comfortable around you. Many couples are already suffering from the anxieties associated with their wedding and you definitely don't want that nervousness to show up during your shoots.
Try chatting with the couple and get to know them a little before you start shooting. Find out their history, where they met, common interests, places and people that are special to them and the like. This kind of info serves as a terrific source of ideas for your concepts and themes for your photo shoot. The couple themselves usually have at least a vague idea of what they want to see in their wedding album.
For example, one couple I photographed cited their university campus - where they met and became a couple - as one of the most important places to them. So I suggested that they re-live their college days in our photo shoot. We walked around the university campus and took snaps of them together. They even donned on old alma mater costumes to complete the look.
When shooting live for an actual event, in my experience it's always best to go for a candid shot where the subject is less "conscious" that he or she is being photographed. This makes for a more natural feel to your photographs and will not smack of being too "scripted" and fake.
Establishing a relationship with the couple also plays an important role here. Once a couple is relaxed with you, then they won't feel uncomfortable or constrained (which will definitely show in their gestures and facial expressions) when you're walking around in the background taking pictures of them at their wedding.
One last tip is to make yourself at least slightly familiar with the place you will be shooting so you can 'scope out' good angles and best vantage points from which to take excellent shots.
Hope this helps!
To ask a photographer "How did you get that shot" is like asking a writer to explain how he or she wrote a particular piece of literary work. There really isn't any standard or predefined way - that's just how it is with any creative process.
However, it is my experience that the most important factor in establishing good creative shots for a wedding album is getting acquainted with the couple you're shooting. Try talking with them and establish some rapport so that they feel comfortable around you. Many couples are already suffering from the anxieties associated with their wedding and you definitely don't want that nervousness to show up during your shoots.
Try chatting with the couple and get to know them a little before you start shooting. Find out their history, where they met, common interests, places and people that are special to them and the like. This kind of info serves as a terrific source of ideas for your concepts and themes for your photo shoot. The couple themselves usually have at least a vague idea of what they want to see in their wedding album.
For example, one couple I photographed cited their university campus - where they met and became a couple - as one of the most important places to them. So I suggested that they re-live their college days in our photo shoot. We walked around the university campus and took snaps of them together. They even donned on old alma mater costumes to complete the look.
When shooting live for an actual event, in my experience it's always best to go for a candid shot where the subject is less "conscious" that he or she is being photographed. This makes for a more natural feel to your photographs and will not smack of being too "scripted" and fake.
Establishing a relationship with the couple also plays an important role here. Once a couple is relaxed with you, then they won't feel uncomfortable or constrained (which will definitely show in their gestures and facial expressions) when you're walking around in the background taking pictures of them at their wedding.
One last tip is to make yourself at least slightly familiar with the place you will be shooting so you can 'scope out' good angles and best vantage points from which to take excellent shots.
Hope this helps!
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Learn more about creative%20wedding%20photography. Stop by Quentin Donohoe's site where you can find out all about creative%20wedding%20photography and what it can do for you.
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