8/17/11

Use your venue to make unique wedding photos

By Louisa Farrelly


Your choice of wedding venue can have an enormous impact on your wedding photos, having an effect on everything from the background for your group shots to the style of your photos. Here are 7 tips on using your wedding venue to get the very best possible wedding photos.

Try to choose a wedding photographer that has worked at your location before. They will have prior experience of the setup of the locale, so they are going to know where the light comes from at what time, and where the best settings are for group stills. They will also have a brilliant idea of the type of apparatus they need to bring along. See if your bridal photographer can show you examples of photographs they have taken at your venue.

Speak to your photographer about the type of location you have chosen, and the kind of photographs that would best complement that venue. A romantic country house could be the ideal setting for dreamy sepia shots, while a chic town hotel would be a great spot to try out glamorous Hollywood snappers style photographs.

Watch out for potential photo locations and note them down when you visit your wedding venue. The location coordinator should be well placed to give you some ideas but do not be frightened to be different. Maybe they usually have the group pictures in the main entrance, but you would prefer to have them next to a pretty fire? If you're of the opinion a ruined wall with climbing ivy is more engaging than the manicured hotel grounds then speak up.

See if your location has a unusual location for your group stills. If they have an stylish staircase you could have your guests prepared along the railing. Maybe there's a balcony or high window where your shutter-bug could take an overhead view of all your guests gathered together. Another great possibility is to have the guests together on the balcony throwing confetti down onto the ecstatic couple below.

Your wedding venue may have stunning grounds for footage but make sure you have a back up indoor plan in place in case of bad weather. If it does rain, don't disqualify outdoor photographs altogether. Photos of the bride and bridegroom in gum boots and the guests with umbrellas can make classic additions to the marriage album.

If you a hiring an extremely attractive venue, or the location is integral to your marriage theme, confirm your snapper gets 1 or 2 good shots of it before the marriage when there are no guests around. They could also photograph special features like quaint windows or doors. You might also have before and after footage of your reception room being decorated, or a sequence of shots of the decorating process itself.

Always check if there are any photography restrictions at your location. You do not want to spend an hour having your couple's photographs taken in the hallway just to find out the antiques in there cannot be snapped, or it's been used as a film set and exclusivity rights still apply.




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