mjperini
Junior Member
Posts: 43
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Weddings are demanding, things change quickly,there is no time to reshoot. You go from white dress & Black tux in the blazing sun, to reception halls that can be as dark as caves. To say nothing of the added pressure of a family member. With only a few weeks to go my advice would be this> 1. Shoot RAW only, JPG bakes in settings and leaves much less room for adjustment. Some fine wedding photographers shoot Jpgs but they are riding white balance etc. You need to capture as much information as possible in your files which will give you the most flexibility to process later. 2. Use auto white balance, it will keep you in the ballpark. You can also use Highlight tone priority to keep your dress from blowing out. 3 use fast lenses, the 24-70 f/2.8 and 70-200 f/2.8 L IS will cover everything on a FF Body. The 1Ds3 produces beautiful files at iso 800, even 1600. 4 Bring a backup body. Make a shot list. Think about where you'll stand. 5 Don't overshoot, take your time and anticipate the action. Weddings have a flow but be ready for the unexpected opportunity. 6 Bounce your flash, if you need one. Bounce off side walls rear walls , last resort cieling w/ a bit of pop up card. 7 get high, get low 8 find a wedding or two & practice & take notes on what did & didn't work Try fill flash for sunny day. 9 In a dark reception hall flashes can get confused and if you're not careful you can find your camera giving perfect exposures but at 1/8 sec. I generally go to manual 1/125 sec @ f/4 and set the flash to ettl. works every time. 10 in a dark church I generally shoot Av @ f/2.8 and keep an eye on my shutter speed. IS or monopod or "the Lean" hope this helps good luck, you'll do great
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