Friday, November 16, 2012

Shooting Tips For Wedding Photographers

By Marley Smith


Shooting a wedding has its own challenges, and these make it uniquely challenging from the remainder of the photography genres. While landscape photographers chase the right light, and macro photographers delve into a world virtually hidden from the naked eye, wedding photographers take pains to mix all these rudiments in one day. The most challenging of them all? You can't have second takes in weddings.

How then can you take wedding photos which are pleasing not just to you as the photographer but also to the couple? Follow these vital shooting tips to make more memorable and technically improved wedding photographs.

Shoot from the hip, from the outsie in, and through curtains and leaves. While straightforward shooting is proven effective, there are unexplored paths in photography you might want to try out, such as bending over and shooting the flower girl fumbling over her curls during the wedding. Search for curtains and leaves, and incorporate them in your photo. Pictures taken from such angle would give the viewer a sense of mysticism, like they are looking from afar into the scene. During the bride's prep time, when bridesmaids flock to her to button up her dress, put a stray hair strand in place, or help her with her shoes, go outside the room and shoot the commotion from the outside.

Make effective use of your ISO. Many photographers stay away from using high ISO and choose the camera flash instead. Seasoned photographers will tell you that adding a small amount of grit and grain to your photos could actually look appealing when done the right way. High ISO in poorly lit areas usually turn out perfect when there are movement and people in the photo..

Make it a point to catch movement too, and the wedding reception gives you ample opportunities to do this. People laughing and dancing together will make great action photos, so do not ditch that slow shutter speed yet. You will find out that not all blurred photos turn out bad.

Capture candid scenes with simple compositions. The simpler the composition, the better. This is a job that wide-aperture lenses will do wonderfully, and most of the time, they turn out into some of your best photos of the day. An 85mm f/1.8 or f/1.4 is a great choice, and so is the 24-70mm f/2.8. Less expensive alternatives are the 35mm f/1.8 and the 50mm f/1.4 or f/1.8.




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