Wednesday, May 30, 2007

Availability Update!

We are currently fully booked for the 2007 wedding season. We limit the number of weddings we do to ensure quality. If you have a nonstandard wedding date later in the year or are getting married on a nonstandard day, Friday or Sunday, send us an email to check the availability and we'll see what we can do. At this time we only have a couple of 2008 weddings and they are very early in the year, but the summer wedding dates generally are spoken for by the end of January so reserve your date now!

We have lots of evening slots during the week available for senior portraits. I know summer hasn't even arrived yet, but wouldn't it be great to get it over with and have your entire summer to enjoy the fun and sun? Give us a call today to schedule your senior portraits.

Tuesday, May 29, 2007

Studio Location


Buck Portrait Studio has found a permanent studio location near downtown Logansport. It's a very good location with a ton of floor space. There will be much much more room in the shooting area to try lots of new things that were never possible in my home studio. Stay tuned for more information especially when we will be opening at that location.

Monday, May 21, 2007

Congratulations Kelli and Anthony


Kelli and Anthony had a beautiful ceremony in Wabash, Indiana. It was really great to share their special day with them. They also put together one of the most organized and focused wedding parties I've ever seen. We had about 45 minutes extra at the end of the day that we ended up using to take some extra outdoor shots of Kelli and Anthony. That's really a great thing, but I probably won't get that opportunity again any time soon. All in all it was a great day to be a photographer, and from what I could see it was pretty good for the newlyweds as well! Congratulations you two!

Wednesday, May 16, 2007

Online Proofing

I'm very pleased to be able to offer a brand new online proofing service to all of my clients. I've always offered online proofing, but there has never been any way to place the order through the web. The days of writing your order down on a scratch pad and emailing me a list of pictures are over. You can now view your images, choose the sizes of enlargements you want to buy, place the order, and pay by credit card! This is pretty much an all in one package for all of my clients. If you would like to see a recent shoot of yours in the new system give me a call and I can set it up. I've uploaded every shoot for April and May already, just visit http://buckportraitstudio.com/preview to see yours.

Monday, May 14, 2007

Formal Wedding Portraits


Very few brides can fully appreciate the stress they'll be under when their big day arrives. The emotions present run the gamut from elation to fear. A great way to make the bride and groom feel at ease while posing for portraits is to make sure the sanctuary is cleared out. Only those people who will be appearing in portraits should be present. This allows the subjects to relax and not feel like their putting on a show for family and friends. This also keeps interaction between the subjects and their guests. A bride being talked to by someone in the first row tends to be looking at the first row instead of the camera. If possible ask the ushers to not allow guests back into the sanctuary during the after ceremony portrait session.

We generally shoot larger groups first, so we get your entire family first, allowing them to head to the reception when their shots are finished. Then we shoot the entire wedding party releasing first the ushers, then groomsmen and bridesmaids, then finally the best man and matron of honor. By the time we're ready to shoot just the bride and groom, few people are left to distract the bride and groom from looking great in their portraits.

Friday, May 11, 2007

Senior Portraits


We had a blast out at Crooked Creek Trails with Ashlie and her horse Diamond this week. We took a walk into the woods to a great spot where a creek turns almost 300 degrees around, there were tons of great spots to pose and we got some unique shots for her senior portraits. I have to say I was very surprised out just how much horses blink, his eyes were closed in quite a few of the shots. He wouldn't smile either, I tried "Say cheese!," and when that didn't work I tried to get him to say "Hay," but that didn't work either!

Monday, May 07, 2007

Party Portraits

We were recently hired to provide formal portraits to the guests at couple of parties and I have to say I was very pleased with how the whole process went. Being able to get lots of combinations, mother and father with kids, mother and father with grand kids, grandpa with son, grandma with nieces, 4 generation portraits, and on and on and on. I never really considered how rare it is to get these types of shots for a family and I really enjoyed it. We proofed the shots on a laptop and there seemed to be a lot of people buying other people's poses. It was all one huge extended family so being able to see sibling's family shots was really great for everyone. I have to tell you this is one area of photography I probably never would have thought about, but the opportunity to take some truly once in a lifetime portraits is just too much to ignore. If you have a family reunion coming up please give us a call, we charge a flat fee of $90 to cover an event and we have some really great package deals in addition to our super low price of $10 per unit.

Thursday, May 03, 2007

Approach to Weddings

My typical approach to photographing a wedding involves arriving several hours before the ceremony starts. The trend towards true photojournalistic coverage of a wedding may be catching on, but I still love to do formal portraits of the bride and groom. It's classic portraiture and the few times a bride has said they don't want it, they've always regretted it. The groom and his party usually go first, about 2 hours before the ceremony, we do several poses, including a few of just the groom and best man, then we do a large number of groom only poses. We usually can finish 100 to 200 exposures in about 30 minutes.

After that, the groom goes and hides and the bride arrives about an hour and a half before the ceremony. We spent 30 minutes or so on fun bridesmaid poses, and get a few of the maid of honor and the bride. Then we spend 30 minutes getting lots of shots of the bride, her hair, her train, her flowers, and any other detail that needs to be captured. We do about 200-300 exposures in about an hour leaving 30 minutes before the ceremony starts.

The ceremony is captured unobtrusively, I don't use flash, I don't go to the front of the church. I may walk down the middle aisle a few steps, but most shots will be from the balcony and from the back row of the church. Since flash is not used, slow shutter speeds will be required and that means a tripod. There is no good way to move a large tripod around a church during a wedding, so I don't do it.

After the ceremony, formals for both sides are taken. We start with the largest parties first. Poses with grandparents are done, then siblings, then parents, then just the wedding party. This allows us to release people to the reception fast instead of making them sit around watching portraits being taken. Finally it's just the bride and groom, we spend 15-20 minutes getting semi-posed portraits of the bride and groom interacting as husband and wife for the first time.

When we arrive at the reception it's back to photojournalism. I capture the events of the evening as they unfold. I keep my eyes open looking for interesting exchanges between guests and the wedding party, and I document the details of the room.

After all of this I generally deliver between 800 and 1000 images to the bride and groom.