Posted on 06. Feb, 2010 by Booray Perry in Tips and Techniques, Wedding Photography
Trying to decide which metering mode to use when photographing a wedding is a bit of a pain. It doesn’t help that there are four different modes to choose from, each with an icon that you need a Rosetta Stone to decipher. Last night I took some photographs that will hopefully shed a little light [...]
Posted on 09. Jan, 2010 by Booray Perry in Wedding Photography
This may sound strange, but designing a wedding album can be more stressful than actually taking the pictures. When you’re shooting a wedding, you try all sorts of different techniques to get the shot. That way you have a lot of options available to you later when designing the album. However, when designing the [...]
Posted on 23. Dec, 2009 by Booray Perry in Wedding Photography
Many wedding and Bar Mitzvah photographers find themselves in a bit of a pickle when they are first starting out. You’ve looked at hundreds of websites and seen all these incredible, artistic wedding pictures and decided “I want to do that.” So, you buy all the equipment, flashes and fast lenses that you can [...]
Posted on 04. Dec, 2009 by Booray Perry in Wedding Photography
One of the things that makes Wedding Photography such a challenge is that you have to be able to wear so many hats. When I shoot a portrait session I have to be able to light and shoot a portrait session with a model (following directions) and retouch the images. When I shoot a [...]
Posted on 11. Nov, 2009 by Booray Perry in Random Thoughts, Wedding Photography
I’ve been trying to write about bounce flash at weddings for about an hour now. The problem with explaining bounce flash is that it seems simple at first (just point the flash over your shoulder!) but then there’s a snag … a situation where that doesn’t quite work. So, you talk about the snag, which [...]
Posted on 16. Oct, 2009 by Booray Perry in Wedding Photography
I was thinking today about what I would have liked to known when I was first starting out as a wedding photographer in Tampa and realized that, despite the wealth of information available to the newby, I don’t recall ever seeing a detailed breakdown of the equipment a typical wedding photographer carries to a [...]
Posted on 01. Oct, 2009 by Booray Perry in Portraits and People Photography, Wedding Photography
One of the things that quickly distinguishes a professional photographer from an amateur is the ability to select a good location for a portrait (also, professional photographers have an air of mystery and suave intrigue about them, like James Bond). I see this every weekend when I’m shooting weddings (I’m a wedding photographer in [...]
Posted on 21. Sep, 2009 by Booray Perry in Random Thoughts, Wedding Photography
There are so many issues that wedding photographers can argue about: light, composition, equipment, price, style and so on. I think it’s a hoot that the one issue that always seems to get the most varied and heated opinions has nothing to do with the actual art of wedding photography (I’m a wedding photographer [...]
Posted on 22. Aug, 2009 by Booray Perry in Photoshop, Random Thoughts, Tips and Techniques, Wedding Photography
When you first decide that you want to be a professional photographer, there are so many things that you have to learn. You’ve got to learn the equipment, the software, and the business side of being a professional photographer. Then there’s the unbelievable amount of knowledge that you have to absorb in order to develop [...]
Posted on 12. Aug, 2009 by Booray Perry in Tips and Techniques, Wedding Photography
I think it goes without saying that a professional photographer produces unique and creative images at a wedding that the ordinary guest can’t hope to duplicate. I’m saying it anyway because more and more I see people doing their best to do my job. At a typical wedding there are 2,347 cameras. Everyone has a [...]