SGirimont Photography Blog: The Stories Behind the Images


Archive for the ‘Weddings’


The Crying Dad (and photographer!)

The Crying DadThis was a first for me. When I saw this scene through the viewfinder of my camera, I actually started to cry myself!

The father of the Bride, this bull of a man with muscles on his muscles, the kind of man you would go out of your way to make sure never got mad at you, broke down into a sobbing mess while dancing with his daughter.

I have to admit that this isn’t the sharpest picture I’ve ever taken, because I was busy blinking away tears myself to pay much attention to where I was focusing.

Before this wedding, I’ve never had so much of a hint of emotion come over me; I’ve been all business and too busy capturing the action to get too caught up in it, but not this time. When I saw this… wow. Just wow.

I don’t think there was a dry eye in the house, so at least I was in good company!

 

Twin Boys and the Painful Realization

Twin Boys

These twin boys were the young brothers of a bride who’s wedding I photographed a few years ago. The only way you could tell the boys apart was that each was missing a different front tooth; one was missing the left tooth, the other the right. For the brief period of time it would take the new tooth to grow in, they weren’t quite identical.

This image is significant to me because it caused me to change camera systems.

I provide my wedding clients with PDF slideshow files of their images on disk. This way, my clients can click a file and sit back and enjoy their images without having to install software or experience any platform incompatibilities. PDF slideshows just work. When I was reviewing the results of the slideshow, this image appeared extremely noisy. The “grain” of the image was so strong that it interfered with my monitor’s display capabilities and made the image look like it was printed on very rough sandpaper.

Going back into Photoshop to examine the image more closely, I noticed that the problem would only be seen if the image were shown at full screen size. Zoom in or out and the image looked great. Even printed, the image looked great, but when seen at full screen size, it looked like crap, quite frankly. Naturally, the PDF slideshow displays at full screen size.

When you look at images on a disk, what size do you like to view them at? If you answered “full screen size” you’re most likely in the majority. I know that’s how I like to see them and I imagine that’s how my customers like to see them.

I was able to fix this image by running it through some extra noise reduction software so I could deliver it to my client knowing it would look it’s best no matter how she viewed it. This is one of the driving forces in how I do business: deliver the best possible product to my clients.

After verifying that I didn’t have the same problem with any other images from the wedding, I packed up the product and shipped it off. Then I started examining what implications this discovery had on my business.

This image was taken with a Nikon D2x at ISO 800. At the time, the D2x was the best camera Nikon made. They didn’t get any better than that. I had also been a Nikon shooter for about 15 years at this point and really loved how their equipment was made. However, I also realized that I could not afford to take the time to run images through extra noise-reduction routines in my post-processing without significantly delaying my turn-around time. I was also very worried about not noticing images that might need to go through the extra noise reduction. What would a bride think if she saw one of those images? Noise reduction software also has the drawback of softening image detail, so it’s sometimes a compromise between acceptable noise levels and acceptable image detail. Noise is not  a major problem for printed images, but images displayed on a monitor are much less tolerant of noise and grain.

At the time, there was no indication from Nikon that they would be coming out with anything that had better noise characteristics. The rumors of the eventual replacement at the time still indicated a sensor that would have roughly the same pixel density as the D2x, meaning the noise would still be an issue.

Canon cameras, on the other hand, had an excellent reputation for noise, especially the 5D. But I had never shot with Canon before, so I had concerns about the learning curve.

In the end, my drive to be able to deliver the best possible quality to my customers outweighed my concerns regarding learning a new system and I sold my Nikon equipment to purchase Canon gear. The learning curve was not nearly as bad as I feared it would be and I was soon using the system like I’d been born to it.

Nikon eventually came out with the replacement for the D2x (the D3), and it arguably has some of the best noise characteristics on the market. However, it was a year-and-a-half between when I switched to Canon’s 5D cameras and when Nikon’s new camera came on the market. That’s a year-and-a-half of delivering the highest-quality images I’ve ever produced that I would have missed out on had I not switched.

I’ve learned this lesson many times during the course of running my business: if you make decisions based on what will deliver quality to your clients, you will rarely be disappointed. I’m glad Nikon finally produced a camera that is well suited to wedding photography, but I’m not giving up my 5D’s. I love them.

The Complicated Wedding Dress

A few years ago, I was reading an article in some high-end bridal magazine about expenses brides would incur over the course of their wedding. The usual expenses were detailed; reception location, catering, cake, dress, decorations, photography, video, dress assembler, makeup artist, hair dresser…

Uh, wait a minute. Dress Assembler? I’d never heard of such a thing! It seems some wedding dresses can get so complicated to get on that there are people who specialize in helping brides get dressed before their wedding.

I have to admit, I kind of laughed at the time. I mean, it’s a dress! How complicated can it get? Then came my 7/7/07 wedding.

The picture shown here has special meaning to the bride. Not just from the fact that it shows a detail of the dress she couldn’t see herself or that it’s a pretty picture of the lacing and the bow, but from the fact that it is an illustration of final success after a good 45 minutes of struggling to get that thing on!

There were ties and loops and hooks and things we’d never seen before that were supposed to go somewhere or connect with something, but no one could figure it all out. The bride admitted that when she’d tried the dress on during the fitting, they hadn’t really paid that much attention to how it was assembled. I was absolutely no help as I’d never seen one like that, but I certainly got a lot of pictures while they were trying to figure it out.

So, brides, pay attention when you pick out that dress! If you think it might be a good idea, try to hire someone who’s job it will be to make sure it’s put on correctly. Might save some time and anxiety in the hours before your wedding ceremony.

By the way, this wedding took place at the Clover Forest Plantation in Goochland County. Wonderful location. Highly recommended.

The Crying Bride

The Crying Bride

I can’t speak for other wedding photographers, but personally, I absolutely love it when the brides I’m photographing are so overwhelmed with emotion during the service that they start crying. It happens less often than you might think! I once showed this image to David Beckstead, a very famous destination wedding photographer, during a portfolio review and he admitted that he’d never had a bride cry.

To me, this is like hitting all 7′s in Vegas. It’s rare and wonderful.

Last year on July 7th (remember 7/7/07? Huge day for weddings) I had another bride with a tear on her cheek. It was an outdoor wedding in 100+ degree heat, so I didn’t know right away if she was crying or just sweating! I asked her later when she picked up her proof book and files. She swore it was a tear.

This wedding took place at the West End Presbyterian Church in Richmond, VA. The bride was the sister of a groom who’s wedding I had also photographed at this very same church a year or so before. I love photographing weddings from the same family. It’s great to see the same people again.

Wedding Photography = Sports Photography?

Bike Racer

It may, or may not, surprise you to hear that Wedding Photography and Sports Photography are very similar. And I’m not just talking about those weddings where the bride or groom go running down the aisle, vault over the ushers who are trying to stop them and set new world records in the 100-yard-dash to their car. (Note: I’ve never witnessed one of these, but I’ve heard the stories).

No, I’m talking about how the photographer must be able to predict where the best place to capture the action will be; calculating angles and light and timing the click of the shutter to capture the peak action. Cameras that can fire 10 frames per second should not be relied upon to capture the peak action; the “spray and pray” method of photography is less preferable than good predictive skills and timing. And, of course, luck has a little to do with it too, but, as they say, luck favors the prepared.

Back when I co-owned a mountain bike race photography business called BoilingPoint Photography, my preferred method of shooting the fast action of the racers wasn’t with a long lens and fast shutter speed. No, my preferred method of shooting was with a very wide-angle lens, forcing me to be right at the side of the trails, and slow shutter speeds coupled with flash. The flash acts to freeze the motion of the rider, while the slow shutter speed and movement of the camera, served to put a motion blur on the background.

Groom-Niece Dance

This happens to also be how I like to photograph much of the reception when shooting a wedding.

In the first image above, I am crouched low at the side of the trail at a spot I’ve chosen because I knew the slight right turn on the downhill slope just past me would give me a nice angle as the rider turned the front wheel. Using a 17mm lens, I am only a few inches away from the riders as they go past at ridiculous speeds. Using a shutter speed of about 1/20th of a second gave me a nice motion blur on the background as I moved the camera (panning) to follow the rider as he went past. With the flash firing at the end of the exposure (rear-curtain sync flash), the rider was frozen by the flash as it fired, but the background, being so much further away, is not.

In the second image of a Groom dancing with his niece, the same techniques were used, except the camera was not moved during the exposure. Again, a shutter speed of about 1/20th of a second was used as the girl was twirling around. I timed my exposure for when the girl’s face was going to be toward the camera, but luck played it’s role from the fact that she just happened to be looking right into the lens when the flash fired, freezing the action at just the perfect moment. The slow shutter speed also helped balance the ambient light with the flash, thereby avoiding the all-too-familiar look of a dark background and an over-exposed subject that just screams “THIS PERSON USED A FLASH!!!!” I much prefer this look, don’t you?