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#11 |
Senior Member
Join Date: Feb 2005
Posts: 625
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some more suggestions, check the community colleges in your area, most of them offer course in photography, and some also offer courses in wedding photography. I took one before I shot my neices wedding and it made all the difference in the world. It sounds like this is something you want to do professionally anyway.
style="BACKGROUND-COLOR: #000000"Eric and Randy aren't kidding about the wedding photography though, if there was ever a profession that Murphy's Law applies to that would be it. I was pretty lucky with my neices wedding and came away with some good photos. If you have a couple of 1GB cards my suggestion would be to fill them up with pictures, the more you have the more chances you have of getting several that really good, a quite a few the good enough. style="BACKGROUND-COLOR: #000000"if you would like I could e-mail the work sheet for the wedding photography course that I took, it is basiclly an outline with some of my hand written notes, but some very good info. |
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#12 |
Junior Member
Join Date: May 2005
Posts: 4
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thanks for the tips caboose...
I am actually a wedding planner but for this wedding I will be making my assistants coordinate the wedding so I can take the pictures. This will be my friend's wedding this summer. You mentioned that I should set my lens for manual focus when there isn't that much light...I will have to try that tip out .. I just need to make sure I get the correct equipment whether it be lenses and flashes and all the other equipment. You mentioned that you had a wedding work sheet..if you can please email it to me at [email protected] that would be appreciated. thanks caboose sincerely, rose |
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