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#1 |
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Member
Join Date: Apr 2002
Posts: 206
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Hi All,
I was asked to shoot my sisters wedding a couple of months ago, it was my first wedding shoot and after much preparation, reading, forum browsing and looking at other wedding shoots i gave it a go. It was a hectic day but everything ended up going well and i was pleased with the results and so were my sister and her new husband. Here are a selection of photos from the day, i would love the hear what you think: ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() And lastly my favourite: ![]() Be gentle |
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#2 |
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Member
Join Date: Dec 2003
Location: Sydney, Australia
Posts: 1,696
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It looks good, did you get many reception shots? Although we got nice ones at our ceremony, some of the best were random ones taken at the reception.
[edit]I was looking at composition alone on my phone, so not as good a view as on a pc[/edit]
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Successfull trades: RakOon, drfbro, mR_CaESaR, Spyfox If I've got crap for sale on ebay you like, click here. Old hardware giveaway thread here. Sony Vaio Club Member #21 Last edited by mike-s; 15th July 2012 at 2:35 PM. |
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#3 |
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Member
Join Date: Jan 2007
Location: Sydney
Posts: 2,899
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Are you sure? There are things I would like to say but you throw me off by your last comment. Do you want constructive feedback or not? There's nothing more skills/character building than having your work critiqued the shit out of by people with not emotion ties.
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Storytellers of love + life |
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#4 | |
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Member
Join Date: Apr 2002
Posts: 206
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Quote:
I got lots of reception photos of people dancing/drinking/partying, i just wanted to get some feedback on the more "creative" photos. |
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#5 |
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Member
Join Date: Sep 2005
Location: Gold Coast
Posts: 2,758
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2 is really blown out, not sure what you were going for, but it doesn't really do it for me at all. All definition on the edges is lost.
The lighting on 5 is really harsh and the high contrast has blown out all detail in the bride's dress. Really inconsistent skin tones across all the shots and the groom looks like an orange in 6. Needs a lot of work. Tone mapping in the last (b+w) shot needs some tuning. Any chance you can post the original shot to compare? How much of the soft focus or DOF in 3 & 4 is photoshop? Something just doesn't look right there.
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Travel & Photo Blog: http://www.dfcowell.net |
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#6 |
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Member
Join Date: Aug 2007
Location: ACT 2614
Posts: 974
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Nice set but for your highlights are really blown, no definition or texture.
The groom's skin tones are out of wack the saturation/vibrance is way too high. But the main thing for me are that the blown highlights just ruin the photos. |
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#7 |
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Member
Join Date: Sep 2002
Location: North Strathfield, NSW
Posts: 12,631
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I would suggest posting up some shots SOOC (for critique) and then look at batch editing with same processing styles in something like Lightroom, if you cannot achieve consistent processing with PS.
Others will cover other stuff.
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#8 |
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Member
Join Date: Apr 2002
Posts: 206
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Hi all,
Thanks for the thoughts so far. Im taking it all on board and will revisit some of the photos. In regards to some of the specific photos: 2. I intentionally blew the highlights in post processing. I liked the idea of having it "White" to look more pure and bridal i guess. I wanted to get a dress hanging photo and was limited with window choice. Here are the 2 originals: ![]() _MG_3532 by Rib!, on Flickr ![]() _MG_3533 by Rib!, on Flickr 3 & 4 had a very shallow DOF, that was my intention also. I did soften 3 a bit, i know us photographers love a good sharp image but most girls seem to prefer the softer feel. Here are the SOOC images: ![]() _MG_1264 by Rib!, on Flickr I agree that the skin tones are off, this was due to changing lighting conditions and using different cameras (i think). I tried to give some of the images a warmer feel to make it feel more "country", but looking back at it now it is a bit too orange. 5. The light was harsh, i tried to compensate with a flash and reflector. I have attached the original, most of the dress is recoverable, i think i overcooked the edge a bit though. ![]() _MG_3930 by Rib!, on Flickr 8. Here is the colour original: ![]() _MG_3980 by Rib!, on Flickr Id love to have another shot at a wedding sometime, practice makes perfect. Thanks for the comments so far, feel free to reprocess the originals if you want, will be interesting to get other peoples takes on them. |
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#9 |
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Member
Join Date: Jun 2001
Location: Brisbane
Posts: 8,942
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I don't see a single cut off head, or tiny tiny couple in a vast wide field of view..
Good job, and thank god.. |
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#10 | |
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Member
Join Date: Jan 2010
Posts: 878
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Quote:
To the OP: Personally, I think your shots could use a little more subject isolation. I understand the importance of providing context, but #5 doesn't benefit from being sharp to infinity, and the grass and background shrubbery distract from #8. I'm not saying that you should shoot wide open all day, rather that where you can step back and use a longer focal length, do. Obviously your lighting needs work, too - basically, to avoid blown highlights, you need even light, and that means one of two things: Shoot in the shade and add flash to taste, or shoot in the sun with enough flash to overpower it. I suggest the first - can be as simple as turning the subjects back to the sun and allowing the background to blow out, or you can get fancy and find an assistant to carry a scrim.
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Lucis+Umbra Blog - Photography by c.j. kerr |
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#11 | |
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Member
Join Date: Feb 2002
Location: Melbourne...
Posts: 14,373
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Quote:
![]() They look ok to me, however I am not a wedding tog, I have however been asked to do one in march!
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The world is broken. We are the last choking embers of a fire waiting to burn in. Long before your grandfathers and their fathers before them. We started pulling our planet apart in the name of progress and blind ambition. The greed of man has devoured this earth until there was nothing left. We watch as time eats us alive - A generation born to witness the end of the world |
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#12 |
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Member
Join Date: Feb 2002
Posts: 809
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I think your unprocessed photos look better than your processed ones.
Don't be concerned about looks, or fads. Process the images to the highest technical standard you can. Don't blow your highlights intentionally - and definitely lay off the soft focus. Get your exposures and your skin tones right and you'll be fine. If you want to soften the skin tone, go for it - but don't do it at the expense of the rest of the photo. For a first time - they're perfectly acceptable photos - and I'm sure they'll be happy. Just make sure you start out the right way. Technical quality beats artistic trickery every single time. |
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#13 |
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Member
Join Date: Sep 2005
Location: Gold Coast
Posts: 2,758
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Agreed, I prefer the SOOC shots, especially for the last one.
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Travel & Photo Blog: http://www.dfcowell.net |
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#14 |
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Member
Join Date: Sep 2001
Location: Melbourne 3195
Posts: 1,351
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Nice work for a first attempt. No doubt your sister was well aware of your abilities.
As others have said, they're not technically perfect but I've seen much worse from people claiming to be pros. A client thinking soft focus looks good is quite different to a photographer willingly going nuts with the diffuse filter. |
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#15 |
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Member
Join Date: Sep 2002
Location: North Strathfield, NSW
Posts: 12,631
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Style is style, shoot for what your clients want. KB warriors dont pay you
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