Categories
Photography Weddings

Offering

A sneaky peek at a wedding I photographed last week in Bohernabreena church and Rathsallagh Country House. The bride and groom are off in Kenya now (lucky things!) but I’m hoping they’ll let me share a few more photos on here when they get back.

This church is on Twitter! Very cool Father Trendy 😉

f/4, 1/125 sec, at 17mm, 3200 ISO, on a Canon EOS 5D Mark II

f/2.8, 1/500 sec, at 50mm, 4000 ISO, on a Canon EOS 5D Mark II

f/3.2, 1/1000 sec, at 28mm, 400 ISO, on a Canon EOS 5D Mark II

Have a great time in Kenya you two!

Categories
Photography Weddings

Wedding Photography: Down The Aisle

I have a few thoughts I want to share about photographing weddings. I’ve done seven now, with another three to come this summer. I’m happy to do about one a month because they are exhausting on every level. Fun and exciting and a huge buzz, but they drain me of every ounce of creativity, so I like to give myself time in between to recharge. To those who can shoot one a week, I tip my hat.

Take the shot above for example, it was taken at a brilliant wedding I got to shoot in Ballybeg House (fast becoming a favourite venue for me) at the end of May and the ceremony took place outside where the sun was shining down from a deep blue sky. This section of the day is probably the most intense, there are so many shots you have to get and you almost need to be in a few places at once. Either that or have some kind of telepathy to know exactly what’s coming next and so where you need to be to catch the best angle. In this wedding, instead of the traditional walk down the aisle, the bride and her father walked through the old house down a narrow dark hallway and out into the blazing sunshine. As it’s happening here’s a sample of how my mind is whirring:

OK, they’re getting ready to start walking, will I expose for her dress or do I want to try something different? Maybe if her dress was backlit (the light coming through the lace could look beautiful) and if she and her father are silhouetted against the light from the doorway ahead of them, yea I can see it in my head…how do I expose for that!? OK, I need silhouette but not completely blacked out, so underexpose the dress but not too much and click, click, click because they’re walking and the hallway’s not that long and I need to be ready to quickly change exposure when we hit that sunlight, so I’m clicking and crouching and walking and trying not to step on the dress and spinning the shutter and some of it is probably blurry but maybe that’s ok. And we’re out.

f/9, 1/25 sec, at 17mm, 200 ISO, on a Canon EOS 5D Mark II

All that in a matter of seconds and the whole day is kind of like that.

And I love these two photos, I know the second one’s got movement in it (yea, yea, I mean it’s blurry) but I kind of like that and it’s what I pictured in my head in those seconds beforehand and that makes me feel good. Happy accidents are wonderful but to actually get a shot you pictured…there’s something satisfying about that. But what would have happened if it hadn’t worked? I couldn’t ask them for a redo, not to mention that when we did get out into the sunlight I was still looking, clicking and walking so I tripped on the door jam and only just stopped myself from tumbling all the way down a flight of concrete steps taking the bride and her father out like skittles and landing in a tangled heap at the groom’s feet. Thankfully I somehow managed to stay upright and although my heart was pounding the ceremony was only just beginning so I had to keep shooting. And therein lies the rush and the stress of shooting weddings, they wreak havoc on the faint of heart…and the clumsy.

Categories
Photography Weddings

Church On Time

One of the challenges (and fun parts) of wedding photography is coming up with different angles and different viewpoints on similar events. Every wedding is unique, but it’s still easy to get a bit comfy and take the same shots that were successful in previous weddings. This is my attempt at mixing up the traditional reception line at the end of the ceremony from a wedding I shot a few weeks ago.

In other news…we’re heading down to Cork this afternoon for the massive geek party Blog Awards. We’ll be child free for the first time in years so I plan on letting my hair down (translation: drinking one cocktail and promptly dozing off in a comfy chair in the hotel lounge).

Categories
Photography Weddings

Wedding Photography: Joy & Stephen

Dress
Canon 5D, 17mm, f4, 1/200, ISO 400

Some more photos from Joy and Stephen’s wedding. The preparations were all at Joy’s family home and her 3 sisters Claire, Dawn and Gayle were her bridesmaids. I think at one point Joy’s mum was pinning the veil into Joy’s head 😀 You have to suffer to look this gorgeous!

Getting Ready

Bride
Canon 5D, 85mm, f1.8, 1/160, ISO 400

I vaguely remember days as nice as this one. The ceremony was in Howth Presbyterian Church:

Church At Howth
Canon 5D, 17mm, f13, 1/125, ISO 200

OK, the photo on the left is my favourite from this wedding – actually it’s a contender for my favourite from any wedding I’ve done, but (proving my favourites are never anyone else’s) Joy prefers the one on the right:

Entrance

I loved the dark wooden rafters:

Ceremony
Canon 5D, 17mm, f4, 1/200, ISO 3200

Just for a bit of fun, I was playing with this sequence in Photoshop. I’m still an animator at heart 😀

wedding ring animation

Mr & Mrs:

Exit
Canon 5D, 17mm, f4, 1/200, ISO 3200

Categories
Blogging Photography Weddings

She’s Leaving Home

Wedding Photography
Canon 5D, 28mm, f/2, 1/80, ISO 400

A favourite from a wedding I’ve been meaning to post for ages. This is Joy (and she really lives up to her name) being helped into her dress by her Mum and her sisters. I was laughing so much it was hard to hold the camera still, it was such a fun wedding.

This is also the photograph I sent in as my submission to the excellent Homepages project by Catherine Brodigan (which is still on sale from Lulu.com if you want to nab a copy).