Panic-Just been asked to do first wedding- TOMORROW!!!

lukewoodford

FYI, I am Luke Woodford.....by Luke Woodford
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I have litterally just been asked to do my friends sisters wedding tomorrow as they dont have a tog. Nothing major, just a quite small wedding at the local town hall. I have a D300, 50mm 1.4, 18-200mmVR and SB-800 flash. Any advice would be GREATLY appreciated!
 
Firstly good luck...

try these two threads for advice.
http://www.talkphotography.co.uk/forums/showthread.php?t=77921

http://www.talkphotography.co.uk/forums/showthread.php?t=80936

Then a search for other threads is you're friend here.

If you can speak to bride and groom early on to get an idea as to shots required. Do not assume people look at cameras, you will have to make them.

Mark

Im meeting the bride in the morning at 9 and the ceremony is at 10:30. The kinda good thing is they just had a family member taking pictures on a compact, they couldnt afford a tog as its a very low budget wedding, and im doing to for free as i need to do a wedding. So i guess they are gonna be happy over the moon if i get some really great shots. i hope!
 
lol im actually really looking forward to it, but would of liked to have been able to prepare a little!

You're a better man than I am, Gunga Din ;)

Good luck, mate. There are some smart cookies in this place, so I'll back away and hand you over to them :thumbs:
 
Make a list of the shots they want you to get. Remember to take the list!

Take as much memory as you can muster, and shoot like a b*****d! You'll end up with a few keepers;)
 
You're bound to have a keep/bin rate of about 1/15, so snap away!
As much memory as you have, charge your batteries, take plenty of AA's for your flash, bounce the flash, etc.
Remember, the longer the focal length, the better the portrait, but the harder to handle.
The 50mm 1.4 will be your friend here, but I'd focus on focal lengths between 40mm and 130mm. Will be your best bet.
 
You're bound to have a keep/bin rate of about 1/15, so snap away!
As much memory as you have, charge your batteries, take plenty of AA's for your flash, bounce the flash, etc.
Remember, the longer the focal length, the better the portrait, but the harder to handle.
The 50mm 1.4 will be your friend here, but I'd focus on focal lengths between 40mm and 130mm. Will be your best bet.

The one thing im not too good with is the flash as i very rarely use it, could you reccomend me a good setting to have it on to get me through the day?
 
I don't know how things work in Nikon World but in Canon land, when you use flash (or even if you don't) manual exposure is recommended for the camera, trying to get an exposure that brings the ambient light up to almost a full exposure, or maybe 1 stop below. You then use the flash in TTL mode, fairly lightly, just to top off the ambient exposure and fill shadows in the eyes and add a catchlight.

Avoid direct flash if at all possible. Find a neutral surface to bounce off, so you have soft lighting and not harsh flat lighting straight into the face. Ideally, flash should be used for creative lighting enhancement, not as the main lighting.

Even without flash, manual exposure is a good plan. You don't want to be fighting your exposure compensation every time you grab a lensful of black tux or a lensful of white dress. Ditto if you zoom out and get loads of backlighting from a window vs zooming in and having the window vanish from the frame.

Above all, shoot raw. It will give you more latitude to fix exposure errors or compensate for difficult light, even if your exposure is as good as you could hope. It will also let you sort out WB after the shoot and not be concerned about getting it perfect from one shot to the next.

I don't really agree with the carpet bombing approach. I shoot around 600-900 shots at a wedding, as a second shooter, and cull that to around 250 or so. The more shots you have the more you fill your cards, the more you wear out your flash batteries and the more rubbish you have to wade through afterwards to find the shots worth keeping. Less is more! Concentrate instead on checking your histogram for good exposures and picking your moments for a good capture, with nice expressions etc.. Shooting anything that moves is not the answer.

On the subject of anything that moves, don't forget things that don't move. Details are nice to get - bridal bouquet, details on the dress, table decorations, place settings, champagne glasses, rings, cake etc etc. Try to get at least one good portrait type shot (not posed, candid is perfect) of individuals or couples throughout the day, relaxed and enjoying the occasion. Have a look at the "Wedding 4" link in my sig for some ideas on grabbing candids.

I shoot with two cameras and have a 17-200 f/2.8 IS lens on one and a 70-200 f/2.8 IS lens on the other. Both have a 580EX flash mounted, but I try to avoid using them if possible or have the FEC dialed down for a subtle effect. Most of the time, especially indoors, I am stuck on f/2.8 and will be at either 800 or 1600 ISO for the indoor shots. That's the reality of wedding photography. You need fast glass and high ISOs.

Feel free to ask specific questions if you have any, but remember I am a Canon guy so can't help with the foibles of Nikon gear. Oh, and I've only shot four weddings so I am hardly the oracle on the subject, just trying to help :)

EDIT : p.s. I shot my first wedding (Wedding 1 in my sig) two years ago, just 3 months after I got my first DSLR and days after I got my 580EX. I only had one lens - the painfully slow (aperturewise) 17-85. I made a monstrous hash of the shoot, using Av mode (Mistake!) and getting big problems with exposures, subject blur and white balance. The blurred shots had to go, but the exposure and WB problems could be fixed fairly well as I shot in raw. I shot 622 images that day, from 07:00 to 21:00, and ended up with ~160 keepers. The B&G loved them :)
 
I don't know how things work in Nikon World but in Canon land, when you use flash (or even if you don't) manual exposure is recommended for the camera, trying to get an exposure that brings the ambient light up to almost a full exposure, or maybe 1 stop below. You then use the flash in TTL mode, fairly lightly, just to top off the ambient exposure and fill shadows in the eyes and add a catchlight.

Avoid direct flash if at all possible. Find a neutral surface to bounce off, so you have soft lighting and not harsh flat lighting straight into the face. Ideally, flash should be used for creative lighting enhancement, not as the main lighting.

Even without flash, manual exposure is a good plan. You don't want to be fighting your exposure compensation every time you grab a lensful of black tux or a lensful of white dress. Ditto if you zoom out and get loads of backlighting from a window vs zooming in and having the window vanish from the frame.

Above all, shoot raw. It will give you more latitude to fix exposure errors or compensate for difficult light, even if your exposure is as good as you could hope. It will also let you sort out WB after the shoot and not be concerned about getting it perfect from one shot to the next.

I don't really agree with the carpet bombing approach. I shoot around 600-900 shots at a wedding, as a second shooter, and cull that to around 250 or so. The more shots you have the more you fill your cards, the more you wear out your flash batteries and the more rubbish you have to wade through afterwards to find the shots worth keeping. Less is more! Concentrate instead on checking your histogram for good exposures and picking your moments for a good capture, with nice expressions etc.. Shooting anything that moves is not the answer.

On the subject of anything that moves, don't forget things that don't move. Details are nice to get - bridal bouquet, details on the dress, table decorations, place settings, champagne glasses, rings, cake etc etc. Try to get at least one good portrait type shot (not posed, candid is perfect) of individuals or couples throughout the day, relaxed and enjoying the occasion. Have a look at the "Wedding 4" link in my sig for some ideas on grabbing candids.

I shoot with two cameras and have a 17-200 f/2.8 IS lens on one and a 70-200 f/2.8 IS lens on the other. Both have a 580EX flash mounted, but I try to avoid using them if possible or have the FEC dialed down for a subtle effect. Most of the time, especially indoors, I am stuck on f/2.8 and will be at either 800 or 1600 ISO for the indoor shots. That's the reality of wedding photography. You need fast glass and high ISOs.

Feel free to ask specific questions if you have any, but remember I am a Canon guy so can't help with the foibles of Nikon gear. Oh, and I've only shot four weddings so I am hardly the oracle on the subject, just trying to help :)

EDIT : p.s. I shot my first wedding (Wedding 1 in my sig) two years ago, just 3 months after I got my first DSLR and days after I got my 580EX. I only had one lens - the painfully slow (aperturewise) 17-85. I made a monstrous hash of the shoot, using Av mode (Mistake!) and getting big problems with exposures, subject blur and white balance. The blurred shots had to go, but the exposure and WB problems could be fixed fairly well as I shot in raw. I shot 622 images that day, from 07:00 to 21:00, and ended up with ~160 keepers. The B&G loved them :)

Thanks alot for the long reply, ill try and stay away from flash unless i need it and ill definately shoot manual, i usually do for my other stuff so im quite used to it. Ill post some pics when im done:)
 
Good luck with the wedding!

Funny that, I'm off to someone's wedding tomorrow, but its a really, really posh one in Mayfair :o
 
I'd start by pleading insanity at 8:30am and keep re-iterating throughout the course of the day that any shots you take may or may not work. Basically make sure that the B&G understand and dont lose sight of the fact that you are hot footing it.

That being the case then, sit back, get into the swing and enjoy the day. It can be great fun.

Tdodd has some good pointers as does spencer and maddog.mark

Take lots of cards, spare batteries and a brolly.

Enjoy
 
turn up naked. then go home. return 30mins later clothed and start shooting. this will certainly give the impression you've been handed things at very short notice and hence your photography should be treated as such...
 
Yes its done, i think baring in mind the little notice, the fact that it was in a regestry (spell check) office and the reception was in the dads pub i got some good pics. I made them come down the beach and the park after the ceremony which was definatly a good idea. It was alot harder than i expected due to light reasons and not being great with flash. Remember ive only been doing photography 3 months! Ill pick out my best 10 this afternoon and put them on, gonna chill out and have some lunch now.
 
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