Wedding photography is one of the rare good careers in photography. It is also a fun challenge for amateurs to try to do something creative at a wedding where a professional has been hired to get the essential photos.
All wedding photographers are competent users of state-of-the-art equipment, but the great ones are distinguished by their people and posing skills. Wedding photographers work with models that they've never met, wearing clothes that they didn't pick, under lighting conditions established by a whimsical God, all while watching the minutes between the ceremony and the reception tick away. This photography resource guide includes information on how to take the best wedding pictures and photos. It also includes example photography of brides in their wedding dresses, wedding ceremonies, and best men.
To get you started, check out the following articles and forums on professional wedding photography:
Tips and Advice on Wedding Photography at photo.net
- Wedding Equipment Guide
- Wedding Photography Timeline
- Interview with Jeff Ascough on wedding photography (a lot of good technique ideas)
- Photo.net wedding photography forum (50+ messages per day)
Collaborative Articles
Our panel of 9 wedding photography experts discuss the Business of Wedding Photography:
- Business of Wedding Photography: Main Page
- Topic #1: Determining your personal style and breaking into the field
- Topic #2: Marketing and public relations
- Topic #3: Web sites for the professional wedding photographer
- Topic #4: Wedding photography portfolios and making the sale
- Topic #5: Pricing structure
- Topic #6: Contracts
- Topic #7: Organization on the job - before, during and after the wedding
- Topic #8: Working with assistants and second shooters
- Topic #9: Wedding digital workflow
- Topic #10: Wedding albums, shopping carts, and other products
- Topic #11: Further tips and advice
Photo Articles
"If you want to sacrifice the admiration of many men for the criticism of one, go ahead, get married" -- Katharine Hepburn.
"[Isabelle Archer] held that a woman ought to be able to make up her life in singleness, and that it was perfectly possible to be happy without the society of a more or less coarse-minded person of another sex."by various photo.net staff and community members
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