Display preferences don’t change how we shoot…but good communication from you can free us up to do our job the best way we can!! For example, this is the front of Tanya’s thank-you card:

Wedding thank-you card front

To get this shot I had Tanya sit on the diving board of the pool and Erik jumped in to get some hugs and poof the picture was made. I had communicated with Tanya about her picture preferences and she didn’t want anything too posed and didn’t want to spend precious time away from her wedding posing — and that desire was balanced by the somewhat traditional need to produce a representation of herself and her husband on the thank-you card. So in this shot she enjoyed the mood – as well as the representation – and was freed from any expectation to go all out on the back:

Wedding thank you card back side siloette

I feel this image provides a very good representation of the ‘empathetic’ side of display preferences I first started talking about in another page(link). Now from this shot you can better understand my opening statement “Display preferences don’t change how we shoot…but good communication from you can free us up to do our job the best way we can” you see it’s very easy as a wedding photographer to become afraid of black. By afraid of black, I mean the fast pace and the stress of the job can lead you to only make ‘normalized’ images. Exposures that capture the action or emotion, but the tonality within the image itself does not represent the same emotions and mood that the subject matter does. In this nearly silhouetted photo, where Tanya and Erik nearly kiss, and the nearly setting sun speckles the tenting with golden drops – I’ve achieved a photo who’s emotions, visuals and actions parallel each other and drive home the same golden experience.

The most expressive and unique images may be found, but in the process of doing so we fall short more often than we achieve the goal. As we are talking with you about your wedding day and plans, it’s good to encourage us that abnormal is ok. Hiring a real artist, who will express your wedding is a risk; a risk worth taking for sure! A risk that you minimize by actually looking through many of the events your artist has shot and really taking stock of the expressive powers of the artist. When you really know your artist you can then commit with confidence to those talents.

You can also read more of our thoughts on photography display preferences or choosing a wedding photographer in those categories.

wedding photojournalist signature