Wedding Tips

Tips for Brides: Preparing for Your Photographer to Arrive

Wednesday, April 11th, 2012

I LOVE “getting ready” shots. Seriously. The emotion and joy is so thick in the room as mom sees her daughter in her wedding dress on her wedding day. As mom helps the bride put on her great grandmother’s necklace. As best friends see her as beautiful as she’s ever looked.

Those are the moments we are so happy to capture and share with our couples and their families.

In fact, all of this can apply to the groom too, adapted of course!

How Can A Bride Prepare for These Photos?

Everything but the dress. We love capturing those last makeup and hair details right before you step into your dress. It’s usually an exciting time as you wait in anticipation of seeing it all come together – hair, makeup, nails, flowers, shoes, and… the dress. Getting each of those details before they come together helps tell the story.

Pick a large room with lots of natural light (lots of windows). When I don’t have to artificially add light I am able to capture the photos exactly as both I and those in the room see them. Plus, how distracting is it for those moments to be interrupted by repeated flashes of light? Having a larger room gives us all room to move around and give us plenty of photo options.

Clean up a bit. While I don’t ever expect a spotless room, having your attendants do a quick pickup will help lots. Hiding dress bags, packing clothes, hiding suitcases, making up the bed, throwing away trash and fast food cups help so much. Pretty rooms help make pretty pictures.

Everyone should be completely ready except for you. Your attendants are called that because traditionally, that’s why you asked them to spend all day with you in matching dresses – to attend to you and your needs. Having them be completely ready when I arrive means all of their attention is on you. Each gets to be in your photos helping and interacting with you instead of looking for her shoes.

 Do you have any tips or questions about having the best pre-wedding photos?

Leave a comment below!

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Wedding Tip #1: Making Sure Your Wedding Vendors Play Nice

Wednesday, January 27th, 2010

On your wedding day you have two options… (1) a wedding team that works together or (2) unconnected vendors just doing their jobs.

The Team

I believe the wedding team should be just that – a team. Not just a bunch of hired hands but a team that values each other’s services. Beyond just vendors and more like a group of experts in their own field trying to make your wedding day the best it can be.

The wedding team should run like an expensive watch. It should be made of the highest quality parts that all work together in perfect harmony. If one gear is out of alignment the rest suffer.

A bride’s selection of vendors can make or break the team. She should start with an experienced coordinator to help her. A great coordinator/planner can speak confidently about other vendors’ quality and team spirit. If the coordinator knows that a particular photographer works well with a particular videographer, she knows they won’t be fighting for shots but will instead help one another to get the best shot they can. Think of how a caterer and a baker can work together to create a super-tasty dinner/cake combo. You get the picture.

The coordinator is also the vendor wrangler so to speak. She gets to be the one handling last minute problems and not the bride. The bride doesn’t even have to know that the caterer dropped a plate of meatballs. The coordinator is the one calling to be sure the team will all arrive on time. She is a stress-free bride’s best friend.

Planning Prevents Problems

The planning stages are also critical. Here are a few tips we can offer:

  • Details. Details. Details. (Give as much info to your vendors as possible!) – When I know that the decorations were hand made by your great aunt, I’ll be sure to get lots of photos of them. If you tell me that you bought them at the party store then less time will be spent on photos of them. You probably can’t overload us with details, so make sure you pass them on to us.
  • Quality Vendors Play Nice - Vendors should abide by the unspoken code to work together. Caterers should pause setup to allow for photos. Photographers shouldn’t walk in the videographer’s shot. Photography and videography vendors should talk ahead of time to be sure they are on the same page. In short, professionals act professional.
  • Think The Schedule Through – For example, if you need flowers in the pre-wedding photos, make sure the florist knows that and is arriving early enough to get it set up . Also talk to your video and photo guys to set up a shooting schedule before you set the hair and makeup appointments so that you will have allowed plenty of time for the shots.
  • Don’t Wait Until the Last Minute to Book – The best vendors and locations tend to go first. We are already booking weddings for September 2011 – 21 months away!

Looking Back

When you are on the way to your honeymoon, all the guests are gone, and your vendors have packed up and gone home, you want to look back and know that you had the easiest, most beautiful wedding ever because you took the time to hire the right vendors who worked together to make it happen.

We’re Team Players Who Absolutely Love Shooting Weddings

Want us to be a part of your wedding team? Contact us and tell us about your wedding.

If You’re Wondering Who We Enjoy Working With…

But we love meeting new people too!

Got Tips?

If you have other tips or stories, please help the wedding world by adding them in the comments.

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