I'm sure we have all done shoots where some of the shots should be consigned straight in the bin
I get the feeling The Sun has been a little economic with the truth with this.
When I was ten, I photographed my aunt's wedding with my first camera - an Agfa Isolette. A week later I presented her with a set of twelve square prints - all with their heads missing.
Steve.
I am with Hugh on this....there is a lot more to it that just the Sun's story.
Some might say you were just ahead of the times on cropping off heads off the B&G
Do you know that the photographer did this?Its just awful, shes robbed us of everything. Nothing is ever going to get our day back, said Mrs. Crack
Really??? I have hardly looked at most of our wedding photos yet rely on a wonderful thing called 'memory'.
I'm sure the B&G will get more money from selling this so called story to the paper rather than from the court cases against the photographer.
If you've only paid £100 for a wedding photographer then what can you expect? ? Saying that, it does sound like the photographer told a few porkies on the 'professional' status.
There are lessons to be learned here.
1 : Pay £100 for your wedding photographer, but don't expect Guy Collier quality
2 : Don't read the Scum. Ever.
I find it strange that you are able to 'tarnish' a newspaper yet asking not to 'witch hunt' a photographer, all within the same post - maybe a tad hypocritical.
Regardless of what they paid. I'm sure what they got was not what they were expecting to get.
If something is offered for a price, it should be 'fit for function' regardless of the asking price.
£100.
Steve.
Really??? I have hardly looked at most of our wedding photos yet rely on a wonderful thing called 'memory'.
With respect they must take a large share of the blame for not hiring a professional
They did hire a professional. Someone who charged for the service. She might not have been a very good professional though.
Steve.
My neighbour once gave me a fiver for cutting her lawn, does that make me a professional gardener?
Saying that, it does sound like the photographer told a few porkies on the 'professional' status.
The photos were apparently taken with a Nikon D5100 with kit lens (so the FB group said the EXIF information showed).I don't think the photos were actually taken with an SLR
admitted that she'd told the B&G that she'd recently graduated from college.
Shows the value of a college education!!
Steve.
Yes... for twenty minutes!
And I don't understand why photographers use the term professional so much. You don't hear people describing themselves as professional plumbers, professional hairdressers, professional shopkeepers, etc. They are just plumbers, hairdressers and shopkeepers.
Steve.
My neighbour once gave me a fiver for cutting her lawn, does that make me a professional gardener?
I understand the sentiment, but there's a huge difference between one paid job and calling yourself a professional.
Of course if the girl was advertising her services, and has taken on other paid work - that's a different vessel for the poaching of sea creatures.
The point I was trying to make is that the word professional should not be used as an adjective to mean good.
There are plenty of professionals in all manner of trades who are not very good but still manage to earn a living from it.
It's a bit like the arguments which crop up when a new piece of conceptual
/modern art makes the news and people proclaim that it is not art forgetting the fact that it could just be very bad art.
Steve.
The lass has shot one wedding for money, that doesn't make her a professional wedding photographer.