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Post by jeffreyklassen on Sept 3, 2006 19:49:27 GMT -5
Well as I posted in the other wedding thread I shot a wedding last weekend for friends. Now I would love some feedback on the shots that I took for them. This is only my second wedding and I have no plans to do this often but I do want to get more comfortable shooting people, and doing it well. So any feedback would be great. Some of the mistakes I know I made have to be the placement of my fill flashes in some shots, and forgetting my lens shade. Any tips on framing, and what you do and don't like would be great. Here I have posted a few of my favorites, but please look at the gallery as well and let me know what you think about them, if there are any you think are above average. The Gallery is available here: www.pbase.com/jeffreyk/una__brads_weddingClick them for a larger image. The last two images actually have a deer in the background, see if you can spot it. The first one is a little blurry, I was setting up so quick to catch the deer I messed up.
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Post by andrew7 on Sept 4, 2006 13:08:36 GMT -5
hi, the photos are nice although personally I would prefer to shoot a wedding more in portrait format. Also I would try for a few more full length shots, sometimes tilting the camera slightly.
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Post by jeffreyklassen on Sept 5, 2006 0:21:38 GMT -5
hi, the photos are nice although personally I would prefer to shoot a wedding more in portrait format. Also I would try for a few more full length shots, sometimes tilting the camera slightly. Yes I really noticed my lack of vertical pictures after the fact. And the few I did were not very well framed. That is something I am going to have to pay more attention too.
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rpnix
New Member
Don't try this at home....
Posts: 28
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Post by rpnix on Oct 26, 2006 13:37:40 GMT -5
When you're framing your shot in landscape, look to see if there is a lot of "non-subject" on both sides of your subject... If so, then you really need to flip the camera into portrait position and frame again. You'll get closer to your subject that way, and reduce background "noise". My biggest problem is remembering occasionally to flip the camera back to landscape. I love my MB-D200.
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