Harvey_nikon
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Well, I have just got back from my first wedding shooting solo.
When wedding togs say its a hard day, they are right, it is. I have shot a couple of weddings as a second and loved it, but then it was summer, bright, well organised days that had good venues and every thing went well.
Pretty much the exact opposite of today

It was an ex-work colleague, wedding ceremony and party where in the same venue. Initially it was "meet us at the venue, take lots of informal shots and put them on a DVD", then it was start at her mums, venue, formal shots, informal shots and DVD".
So armed with my new D700 and flashes off I set. Arrived at her mums at 12 as requested meaning I miss all of the getting ready shots which I would of liked to of done but hey ho. Flower photos done, they want bridesmaid and family shots but no where to do it. Get permission to shoot in a neighbours driveway that has a nice foliage end. Lots of photos taken, and we head in to the house to wait for the car. Then decide they want more, so back out we go.
Luckily, other than being cold and a little overcast it wasn't windy or wet. 1pm, the car arrives. I take what shots I can trying to avoid the crappy backgrounds. Bridesmaids jump in and I follow them to the venue timing how long one trip makes.
Arrive at the venue, unload bag and ready gear. Go in, meet the groom and start taking photos of the reception area, then move to the ceremony room. Brief chat with the registrars, no flash during the ceremony, and they had a nice fountain pen so I didn't need my nice empty one
Time is cracking on, groom hasn't got time for photos before bride arrives due to the hotel. After speaking with a young lad later in the night it appears a lot of managers have recently quit leaving them short staffed and those that are left are inexperienced.
Groom is rushed in to the see the registrars, I move outside as the car should be arriving shortly. 5 mins later it does, photos from in the car of bride and dad.
Nobody has a clue what is going on now and the guests are moving in to the ceremony room. I have to take over as the man in charge is useless, mumbles and disappeared for several hours. I tell the groom to stay in the ceremony room with the guests as some of the bridesmaids are trying to get them all out so the bride can meet the registrars, but then they'd all see her including the groom. Registrars agree that it is best come out, so they do. I move in to the ceremony room and set up for photos, registrars come in and everything starts. Photos of everyone coming in, ceremony takes 8-10 minutes in total.
Then it should be my time, a whole 30 mins. What a balls up. Get several of the B&G in the back of the car, before looking at setting up for other formal shots. However, the B&G decide to go for a 20 minute drive. :bang:
It kind of just got worse after that. I had a schedule of what should happen when, it didn't. I got no real formal shots, no shots of the details on the dress, none of the rings etc. Cue 40 minutes of me grabbing what photos I can while everyone smokes and mills around in the bar, B&G are swamped.
greeting line should of been at 3:30, that comes and goes. It starts at 4pm which is when the breakfast should of been served. I am expecting to take lots of photos of hand shaking and hugging, but due to the hotel again guests are just walking in and sitting down while the B&G stand there wondering what is going on. Again I have to stap in, I don't tell them about greeting everyone, it was too late and pointless. I tell them that they stay there until everyone is seating, then they should be introduced as Mr & Mrs and they then take their seats.
I go and have my chicken and pasta while I back up the 300 photos from the day so far, got to love my new netbook
40 mins later I am back inside. Speeches are in another 30 mins. Within 2 mins of being back inside and the mumbling manager decides its time to cut the cake before speeches so it can be served with coffee after the desert.
Then the speeches, but the wedding venue didn't remove the balloons as requested so ended up shooting around them. Speeches were short and emotionless until the grooms.
A few requests for photos from random groups and outside for photos around the car, formal shots mostly with some fun ones.
Then the party is being set up. First dance was supposed to be 9:30pm, at 8:40 the B&G have asked me to photograph their sign outside, which I was doing when I heard "now give it up for the B&G!". Cue me running to the dance floor to get the first dance song. I wanted to use remote off camera flash behind the couple but no time to set it up. Managed to get several shots but not as happy with them as I would of liked.
Rest of the night was good, they liked a party, lots of kids and crazy folk requesting photos all night. The bride has asked me to take some photos of the bridesmaids necklaces because the girl that made them has asked for some. Ok, I grab the prettiest bridesmaid, and she was stunner imho and off we go. Grab a few great shots of her.
left the venue at 12:15, my legs are rubbed raw from all the running around, feet ache and my right hand is still completely numb 2 hours later due to holding the camera all day.
Now I've got between 600-900 photos to sort, backup and edit. The B&G kept telling me I was there as a friend as well as a photographer, and they say they are going to give me a bonus when they get back of the honeymoon just for how great I've been running the wedding for them.
This was, a nightmare wedding, all it was missing was a punch up or either the B or G not showing up
And we nearly had the punch up when a Stoke football player turned up and caused a stir. No organisation, no interest in formal shots, and like trying to herd and direct a bunch of drunken monkey's.
So when wedding togs say it can be tough, it can be. I have 4 more booked for next year + 2 couples from today asking about me. I need to get more used to using the D700, and I really need to get more experience with the SB900's. Studio flash I can set up and use quite easily, strobes for some reason I am struggling with, perhaps its the layout and complexity
I really enjoyed the night do, loved being part of a big day, there is nothing quite like it.
My aim, to get more experienced with equipment and technique, to try and take part as a second more and see how others use do it, and then to develop my own style.
I am sure some of the pro's will provide positive feedback, some may post criticism but hopefully this will all be of some interest to those thinking of doing one.
When wedding togs say its a hard day, they are right, it is. I have shot a couple of weddings as a second and loved it, but then it was summer, bright, well organised days that had good venues and every thing went well.
Pretty much the exact opposite of today
It was an ex-work colleague, wedding ceremony and party where in the same venue. Initially it was "meet us at the venue, take lots of informal shots and put them on a DVD", then it was start at her mums, venue, formal shots, informal shots and DVD".
So armed with my new D700 and flashes off I set. Arrived at her mums at 12 as requested meaning I miss all of the getting ready shots which I would of liked to of done but hey ho. Flower photos done, they want bridesmaid and family shots but no where to do it. Get permission to shoot in a neighbours driveway that has a nice foliage end. Lots of photos taken, and we head in to the house to wait for the car. Then decide they want more, so back out we go.
Luckily, other than being cold and a little overcast it wasn't windy or wet. 1pm, the car arrives. I take what shots I can trying to avoid the crappy backgrounds. Bridesmaids jump in and I follow them to the venue timing how long one trip makes.
Arrive at the venue, unload bag and ready gear. Go in, meet the groom and start taking photos of the reception area, then move to the ceremony room. Brief chat with the registrars, no flash during the ceremony, and they had a nice fountain pen so I didn't need my nice empty one
Time is cracking on, groom hasn't got time for photos before bride arrives due to the hotel. After speaking with a young lad later in the night it appears a lot of managers have recently quit leaving them short staffed and those that are left are inexperienced.
Groom is rushed in to the see the registrars, I move outside as the car should be arriving shortly. 5 mins later it does, photos from in the car of bride and dad.
Nobody has a clue what is going on now and the guests are moving in to the ceremony room. I have to take over as the man in charge is useless, mumbles and disappeared for several hours. I tell the groom to stay in the ceremony room with the guests as some of the bridesmaids are trying to get them all out so the bride can meet the registrars, but then they'd all see her including the groom. Registrars agree that it is best come out, so they do. I move in to the ceremony room and set up for photos, registrars come in and everything starts. Photos of everyone coming in, ceremony takes 8-10 minutes in total.
Then it should be my time, a whole 30 mins. What a balls up. Get several of the B&G in the back of the car, before looking at setting up for other formal shots. However, the B&G decide to go for a 20 minute drive. :bang:
It kind of just got worse after that. I had a schedule of what should happen when, it didn't. I got no real formal shots, no shots of the details on the dress, none of the rings etc. Cue 40 minutes of me grabbing what photos I can while everyone smokes and mills around in the bar, B&G are swamped.
greeting line should of been at 3:30, that comes and goes. It starts at 4pm which is when the breakfast should of been served. I am expecting to take lots of photos of hand shaking and hugging, but due to the hotel again guests are just walking in and sitting down while the B&G stand there wondering what is going on. Again I have to stap in, I don't tell them about greeting everyone, it was too late and pointless. I tell them that they stay there until everyone is seating, then they should be introduced as Mr & Mrs and they then take their seats.
I go and have my chicken and pasta while I back up the 300 photos from the day so far, got to love my new netbook
Then the speeches, but the wedding venue didn't remove the balloons as requested so ended up shooting around them. Speeches were short and emotionless until the grooms.
A few requests for photos from random groups and outside for photos around the car, formal shots mostly with some fun ones.
Then the party is being set up. First dance was supposed to be 9:30pm, at 8:40 the B&G have asked me to photograph their sign outside, which I was doing when I heard "now give it up for the B&G!". Cue me running to the dance floor to get the first dance song. I wanted to use remote off camera flash behind the couple but no time to set it up. Managed to get several shots but not as happy with them as I would of liked.
Rest of the night was good, they liked a party, lots of kids and crazy folk requesting photos all night. The bride has asked me to take some photos of the bridesmaids necklaces because the girl that made them has asked for some. Ok, I grab the prettiest bridesmaid, and she was stunner imho and off we go. Grab a few great shots of her.
left the venue at 12:15, my legs are rubbed raw from all the running around, feet ache and my right hand is still completely numb 2 hours later due to holding the camera all day.
Now I've got between 600-900 photos to sort, backup and edit. The B&G kept telling me I was there as a friend as well as a photographer, and they say they are going to give me a bonus when they get back of the honeymoon just for how great I've been running the wedding for them.
This was, a nightmare wedding, all it was missing was a punch up or either the B or G not showing up
So when wedding togs say it can be tough, it can be. I have 4 more booked for next year + 2 couples from today asking about me. I need to get more used to using the D700, and I really need to get more experience with the SB900's. Studio flash I can set up and use quite easily, strobes for some reason I am struggling with, perhaps its the layout and complexity
My aim, to get more experienced with equipment and technique, to try and take part as a second more and see how others use do it, and then to develop my own style.
I am sure some of the pro's will provide positive feedback, some may post criticism but hopefully this will all be of some interest to those thinking of doing one.


