I am taking my friends wedding photos next weekend. I have only done one other wedding( everyone has to start somewhere lol). My question is where do I stand to get good shots of the wedding party walking up the aisle? Do I stand in the middle of the aisle, shoot the pic and then move out of the way. Please someone help me. Any other advise welcome too. Thank you and God Bless you
I am doing this as a favor for my friend because she cant really afford a photographer. Please only give nice and encouraging answers because I really want to her to have some nice pictures. Thank you
My husband accidently erased my lengthy answer, so here is a shorter version. Photography Guide brought up many good points, I will second start the processional with new batteries! If you don’t have a battery pack, your flash will need time to recycle, so allow for that time. If you don’t have a bracket or diffuser, you will have harsh side shadows. If you have enough pixels, you can avoid that by shooting horizontal, then cropping vertically in post processing.
Photographers go with the flow when it comes to positioning. Usually, I shoot from the front, between the alter and the first pew. Occasionally, I shoot from a spot near the middle pews. I get out in the aisle, get the picture, and step back. I always pick a certain point where I want to fire, usually something like one of the backtwo or three pews. Beforehand, I ask the wedding party to pause at that spot for an instant and LOOK at me with a smile. The processional moves pretty fast, so be ready. If the church is dark, you may have problems with the auto focus. In that case, I pre focus manually on my spot.
I try to get multiples of the bride and father (or whoever) walking down the aisle. You are ***usually*** allowed flash until the handoff. I get one from behind while I’m in the front. I stay up front until the bride and dad arrive. Usually there are a couple of minutes of blab between the arrival at the front and the hand-off and the Dad’s kiss. I use that minute to get to the back or balcony wherre my tripod awaits. Unless it is an unusual ceremony, or I have a second shooter, I stay at the back for the ceremony, until just before the prouncement. Then I scoot back into flash range for the first kiss. Be ready, sometimes the kiss is the briefest of pecks, hardly time to fire even one shot! Then shoot the recessional with flash, the recessional goes really quickly, too.
Some advice for the formals:
Take charge. Have someone in charge of rounding up the family and assorted people who are to be in the group shots. B&G always front and center, together, or higher. Bodies always angled to the camera. Men’s hands at their sides or in pockets, not folded over thier crotch. Ladies hold flowers at waist, no higher. Flowers at hips with stems pointing back is good, too. In full length shots, do not amputate the feet! Same with 3/4, don’t cut off fingers. More than three in the group, shoot horizontal. Start with the biggest group and work down to just the B&G. Don’t let other people with cameras snap while you’re shooting. Fix your poses, then you get your shots first. Otherwise, you will have the subjects’ eyes wondering all over the place. To avoid lots of post work, they must look at YOU, not Aunt Edna. In large groups, take several shots.
Check your histogram to avoid blowing highlights. If you know how to custom WB, use it. (I am assuming you are digital, if film ignore that line, film has more exposure latitude.)
Don’t forget to get some detail shots of the rings, flowers, decor etc etc. Get a good shot of the cake. If you don’t know the families, ask who is important to get a shot of, in particular don’t miss the grandparents, godparents, favorite aunt and uncle.
Take lots of fresh batteries, lots of film or memory. Browse wedding websites to see what poses you might want to copy. Don’t get flustered if something goes not as planned (usually it does) Get a backup camera if you don’t already have one. Doesn’t have to be fancy, but if your main camera goes down, you want to be able to just switch to your spare withour missing a beat.
Good luck, hope it all goes well.