Thursday, April 5, 2018

Choosing your wedding photographer.....

Choosing the Right Photographer for Your Wedding


So how do you choose the right wedding photographer? After all there are a lot of us around, and we seem to offer similar, yet not identical, things. And prices? Prices are hugely variable. So what should you ask to find the right wedding photographer for you?

Wedding Photography Price

OK, you will have a budget, but be prepared to break your budget on your photography. It's the only thing you will have in 10 years time. Not the meal or hotel, but the photographs – consider where this sits in your budget.

Then add in what you want from your photographer:

– A wedding album
– Additional Prints
– Canvas Prints
– A CD/DVD of all images

Wedding Photography Timing

When do you want the photographer to start and finish? It used to be your photographer turned up just before the service, took 12 pictures before you went in, then another 24 group shots outside the church afterwards. 

Well it's not like that now, our typical session will start with the bride getting ready in the morning all the way through to the dancing in the evening, so work out which parts you want covered. Remember though, you really want to tell the Story of the DAY – the whole day, not just the service in the middle:

– Bride getting ready
– Groom getting ready
– Guests arriving at service
– The service itself
– Guests after the service
– Speeches
– Cake Cutting
– First Dance
– Evening Fun and Dancing
– Wedding couple portraits
– Family portraits

Wedding Photography Style

No doubt the style now is much more towards the “reportage” or “natural” photography of the wedding day. Our aim is to make sure we get happy, smiling (or emotional) people being natural throughout the day.

But, your family will never forgive you if you do not have the formal group shots – and indeed you will want them in the years to come.

Also, I strongly favor the couple portraits, to feature the two of beaming, grinning and full of love on that special day.

Also, the bridal dress needs some special work to really make it.

So, there has to be an element of formal posing.

You can add into this mix some “Fashion” style posing, or “Art” posing – this may be posed to look casual or look very stylized – but the aim is to create a very “WOW” image, above and beyond your average capture the moment type image.

Find the right photographer Viva Photography Ltd

Tuesday, October 24, 2017

US Passport and US Visa Photographs


You cannot get US visa or US passport photos from your standard photo booth. The US (and a number of other countries) have different sizes for their passport photographs.

In the case of US passport or visa a 2 inch square image is required, with the head placed within strict limits within the picture.

We can provide a 30 minute turn-round service, including the shoot, fitting the image to the specific format required and providing either prints or digital images.

In particular for the US, you should not try to take these photographs yourself, the US are very particular in their requirements and your passport or visa application can be refused, which for the US can easily turn into a major trauma.

Best regards,

Gordon
Viva Photography Ltd
0151-6060-999

Thursday, September 28, 2017

Dressing for an Autumn Family Session

Dressing for an Autumn Family Session


** ON LOCATION PHOTOGRAPHY **

Autumn (or Fall) is a great time for family photo sessions. Those lovely, warm autumn/fall colours and some gorgeous light make for great photographs.

Here are some ideas of how to dress for your autumn/fall shoot:

1) You are always trying to keep clothes a little coordinated. If it comes to jackets you may not have a set that works for each of you. In that case see if you can swap jackets for sweaters.

2) Denim's works really well. If you can all wear jeans it automatically joins you all together.

3) Use layers, scarves, sweaters, jackets and hats can make great outfits.

4) Go for appropriate shows - riding boots, wellies or fur boots are great. If not then sneakers and flats also work perfectly.

5) Try and choose colours that match the autumn/fall tones, so think warm browns, burnt orange or natural creams.


Thursday, September 1, 2016

Want to make money from Wedding Photography? Here is a great course for you!

Want to be a Wedding Photographer, but need a portfolio?

Existing Wedding Photographer, but want to improve your technique/style or expand your portfolio?

At Viva Photography, our one day Wedding Photography Course will provide you with the essential tools to start, or improve your wedding photography business. Every new wedding photographer faces the same problem, you can't get the work without a portfolio, but you can't build a portfolio without the work! We solve that problem for you, by providing you with the resources to build your portfolio from scratch, or improve your current portfolio with this exciting and informative one day hands on workshop.
We have combined a day of tuition, with providing bride and groom models at a variety of locations so that you can get experience and create great photos. The locations that we will be shooting at are really stunning, such as Thornton Manor and the Hilbark Hotel, so that you’ll leave with a large collection of images to demonstrate your new-found abilities. We have both professional and amateur models on each course, so that you get a real life experience. The professional models have the experience and will pose naturally for you, but the amateurs will be expecting you to direct them, just like a real bride and groom would be on a real wedding day. You will therefore gain experience in posing, composing shots, lighting, etc. so that you can shoot a wide range of wedding images to take away with you.
We have use of a beautiful local church, and two high-end wedding receptions venues to shoot at, both inside and out.  There are only a maximum of 12 people on this course, so you have lots of shooting time and will receive a lot of individual attention from your tutor(s). Each photographer will get individual time to shoot photos with the models. If there are more than 8 delegates, then there will be two tutors and the course will be split into two groups.


Itinerary

08:30   –   Meet at the studio, tea/coffee and introductions, then we head off to our first venue.
09:30  –  Begin first shoot at our first Wedding Venue
  • Shooting Bridal Preparation stages
  • Stunning Bride, Groom and couple Portraits
  • How to shoot flattering images
12:30 –  LUNCH
13:30 – Head to our second fantastic venue
Shooting two separate Bride & Groom couples
  • Posing
  • Working with Natural Light
  • Finding the best backgrounds
  • Learning to ‘See the Light’
15:45 – Head to a a beautiful church
  • Working in Low Light
  • Shooting Bride & Groom images in the church and its grounds
16:45  –  Back to the Studio for a debrief, coffee and close
Times are approximate and may vary on the day depending upon the experience of delegates, traffic, etc.

What you will need to bring with you

Your own transport to get to/from the various venues, although we would expect to do some car sharing.
DSLR
Selection of lenses e.g. standard zoom, telephoto zoom, prime lenses (if you have them).
Flashgun
Charged batteries and spares
Reflectors/light modifiers (if you have them)
Tripod
Comfortable shoes (you will be on your feet for most of the day!)
Suitable clothing to cope with the Great British weather!

The next course is on Tuesday 11th October. Places are limited, so book your place here to avoid disappointment.

Wednesday, August 31, 2016

How do I choose a Wedding Photographer?


This is a good question and it is the one thing that many couples get wrong. So many people just look at the price and choose the cheapest, but that is not the best way to book someone for your special day to record your memories for you! Here are some of the things that can go seriously wrong with your wedding photography if you go too cheap:-

The Photographer pulls out or even worse, doesn't turn up!

We frequently get calls from desperate brides, asking if we have any last minute availability, when the photographer that they booked many months ago, suddenly lets them down! In the past few months, we have had enquiries from several distressed brides to be, who have each lost in the region of £700 to photographers who have pulled out! That is not a very professional way to behave but sadly, this kind of behaviour seems to be becoming more and more regular! We've also had calls actually on the wedding day saying that the photographer that they booked hasn't turned up! So why is it happening?

The Semi-Professional Wedding Photographers

If you book at the cheaper end of the market, then you are far less likely to be booking a full time professional photographer. He/she probably has a full time job, and the wedding photography business is just some "extra money on the side". The problem is that "the day job" can get in the way of this sideline business of wedding photography. For example, a colleague is ill or on holiday so your "wedding photographer" finds that he/she has to work in his/her "day job" on your wedding day. Ask your wedding photographer to meet in his/her studio. Don't accept excuses and agree to meet in your home, or in the pub around the corner. Look them up on Google. Do they have a business address, or is their address a residential home? Do they even give you an address at all? Any professional photographer will have a studio and will be using the studio in between the weddings to do portrait, baby and pet photography amongst other things.


Equipment failure

Today's high tech cameras are all very complex pieces of equipment, and they do break from time to time. A photographer at the cheaper end of the market, or a part time wedding photographer, is unlikely to have the funding available to ensure that they have spare camera bodies, flashguns, lenses, etc. to ensure that they can carry on if a piece of equipment is broken. A full time professional will always have spare equipment. After all it is our bread and butter and we cannot afford to let anyone down.

Photos are not what you expected

Every photographer has a "style" that they prefer to work with, but true professionals will adapt to what you are looking for. In short, you'll get what you pay for. At the lower end of the market, you will simply get the style that the photographer wants to take. He may even be experimenting with different ideas that he hasn't even tried before and using YOUR wedding to experiment and see if they work! There are also plenty of people out there who will go to a camera shop, buy a decent camera and think that they can be a wedding photographer, just using the camera on Programme mode all day. Yes, they will get some good shots this way, but they will also get some pretty awful ones where the lighting is not right, the images are blurry, etc. There is a lot more to being a successful photographer than having a decent camera, a web site and a few business cards!

Accidental damage

A wedding is a place where you have plenty of people all doing different jobs and safety is of paramount importance. Imagine the scene where a waiter comes out of the kitchen with trays full of food, doesn't see that a thoughtless photographer has left his tripod lying on the ground and falls over it! We have heard a story of a photographer's tripod falling over, knocking over a candle and setting fire to the curtains at the reception, but have been unable to confirm the story yet. I just hope that he/she had up to date public liability insurance to fund the repairs at the venue, otherwise it could be the bride and groom footing the bill for damage to the venue as many venue contracts hold the person who booked the venue responsible for any damage!

What questions should you ask your Wedding Photographer?


How long have you been in the wedding photography business?

Is this your full time job?

Where is your studio located? We'd like to come and see it.

What happens if you fall ill, cannot attend, etc?

Are you fully insured for Public Liability and Professional Indemnity?

Do you offer a money back guarantee if I am not happy with the proofs?




Saturday, August 27, 2016

Preserving Photo Memories for the Future

Preserving Your Memories and Your Children's Memories


There are no two ways about it. We all take more photos than we have ever done before. Selfies, snaps with phone cameras, photos for Facebook, Twitter, Instagram, etc. But, and there is a BIG but! Think about the future. Will those images still be there?

The Box of Old Photos

Most of us adults grew up with boxes of photos that Mum and Dad had taken of us when we were kids. Holidays, days at the seaside, birthday parties, Christmas day opening presents, etc. The old shoe box full of old photos brings back lots of memories and always passes time on a rainy day looking through them. Remembering loved ones who are no longer with us, etc. I have plenty of photos going back to my grandparents time showing them in the 1920's, 30's, 40's, etc. Showing my parents when they were little and growing up, courting, getting married, having my sister and I and us growing up. Will today's children be able to look at photos of them as kids in the future? Probably not!

There May Be Trouble Ahead.....

Today, in the digital age, we do have a major problem looming with preserving today's images. Hardly a week goes by without me having someone in the studio for a portrait session who tells me woes of losing their photos. Whether it is a computer hard drive breaking, a phone being lost, stolen or breaking, a CD or DVD that suddenly cannot be read. I hear them all the time. OK, so we have cloud services that we can store our photos on, such as iCloud, OneDrive, DropBox, etc., but could service providers are companies some of whom have gone bust in the past and people have lost everything stored on them.

Will JPG files be around in 20, 30 or 40 years? Probably not!

There are always changes in technology, often at a rapid rate. The JPG file first came about in 1991 as a way to save photos in a small file format. Previous file formats were huge and the JPG format allwoed compression of the file in order to save space. If it wasn't for the JPG format, you'd get very few photos on a 16GB or even 64GB phone! The format has been updated since, but in technology terms, it is now an ancient file format and is well overdue for being replaced by something new! If you think about 1991, the standard then was to record TV programmes on a VHS or Betamax video recorder. How many of us have a one of these now? Very few. How many couples have their wedding video sitting in a drawer on a video cassette that they can no longer play? Quite a large number! DVD players/recorders didn't come onto the mainstream market until 2000 with the early ones in the late 90's costing £700-1000 just for a player, but now, they are cheap as chips!

Now think about your photos and the future. Will the JPG format still be readable for your children to view in 20 plus years time? I doubt it very much. Something new will come along and I expect that in 20 years time 3D photos will be the norm, with the current two dimensional ones being "old hat". New devices are unlikely to support old formats, so the photos, even if they are still stored on the cloud somewhere, will not be readable. Just the same way as the old VHS and Betamax cassettes are not readable by the vast majority of people in their homes.

So what is the answer?

The best way to preserve images is to print them. Simple as that. Don't just leave those photos on your phone or on your computer. Print them, or get them printed. By printing them, you will preserve those memories in the same way as our parents and grandparents preserved them for us to see. Of course, these days, we take so many photos that you'd need to be filthy rich to be able to afford to print them all, so you'll need to be selective. Think about which ones you would like to look at in the distant future and which ones are there, just because you had a camera phone and wanted to post a selfie on Facebook.

Better still, get some professional photos done of your children when they are newborn, toddlers, growing up, graduating, getting engaged, etc.Professional photos do cost that bit more, but they give you top quality images to keep forever.

Don't leave it until it's too late!

I regularly get people coming into the studio saying that a loved one, mum, dad, sister, brother, husband, wife, or pet has passed away asking me to make a large print of a favourite photo of them. At this point my heart usually sinks when they pass me their mobile phone containing the photo. I know how important it is for them to have a large print of their loved one, but will it be possible? My first question is always "Was the photo taken with a mobile phone?" If the answer is "Yes" then I end up having to explain to them that I am unlikely to be able to print anything larger than a 6"x4" or maybe a 7"x5" print, because enlarging them bigger will simply make them look awfully blurred. But my phone has a 13Mp camera, I hear you say. Yes, it may have plenty of megapixels, but the size of the sensor in a phone is so miniscule, that it's ability to capture real detail in high quality is very compromised. An iPhone 6 camera sensor for example, may have 13Mp, but it is only 4.54mm x 3.42mm compared to the sensor in a professional DSLR being 24mm x 36mm. That is a difference in area of 15.5 square millimetres for the iPhone vs 864 square millimetres for the DSLR. This difference in sensor size makes a dramatic difference to the quality of the image. It is not just about the number of megapixels, so please make sure that you get some good quality photos of loved ones, before it is too late. Photos taken on a mobile phone are fine to view on a mobile phone, tablet, or PC, but are not good for making large prints. Consider again having some professional photos done of your loved ones.


Gordon Hunter, Director, Viva Photography Ltd. http://www.wirralphotography.co.uk