Photos Your Photographer
Won't Take At Your Wedding....
by Bill Collins
It has been my experience, with 40 years as a wedding photographer, that
the most forgotten people when it comes to photos at a wedding are often
the individual parents of the bride and/or groom.
Most photographers will be sure to include the parents in photos with
the bride and groom, but most will never think to inquire about doing groups
of the individual dads of the bride or groom with all his brothers and
sisters who are present at the wedding. And of course, the same is true
with the individual moms of the bridal couple, too.
While you're getting these photos taken, be sure to include any parents
and grand-parents of those brothers and sisters that are there, too, to
capture their entire core family group in photos.
A wedding is almost the perfect place to take these kinds of photos with
the individual parents and their siblings. Everyone in the families has
gathered for the big event, many times from far-flung regions of the country.
Their child's wedding may well be the first time the brothers and sisters
have gotten together in years. It may be many years in the future before
they are ever together again. If the opportunity to take these group photos
is passed over because nobody thought much about the importance of this
fleeting opportunity, then those photos may end up never being captured.
These photos often turn out to be the most important and most appreciated
of all the photos I take regularly at the wedding.
I'd be willing to bet that less than 10 percent of wedding photographers
plying their trade today know to get these photos for you. You will have
to specifically ask for them to be taken, or they just won't be done!
Other important people that most photographers will probably overlook
photographing for you at the wedding, unless you give them your written
photo request list, are the bride and/or groom's god parents, groups of
the bride and/or groom's co-workers, high school friends, youth camp friends,
fellow fraternity and sorority members, fellow sports team members for
high school or college.
The one thing no wedding photographer can do is look at a room full of
total strangers and figure out how they interlock with each other just
by looking! I gave up trying to do that after photographing my very first
wedding 40 years ago! Now I send each bride an email before the wedding
requesting exactly this sort of information, so that I don't end up missing
anyone of importance to the bridal couple on their special day.
You will want to see to it that your wedding photographer is thoroughly
armed with this often overlook information, so that they will get these
photos for you. Remember, your wedding photographer can't read your mind
when it comes to who among those present on your wedding are important
to you and need to be photographed with you.
You might also help make getting these photos easier for your photographer
by making sure that the people who are going to be included in these special
group photos are told to be available for the photos being taken when the
other groups are done...either before or immediately after the wedding
ceremony.
You will not want to be trying to pull these groups together at the reception,
because getting them all together at the same time at the reception is
often one of the most difficult things you'll do on your wedding day. It
is better to avoid doing these photos at the reception altogether, if possible
and get them done early in the day.
Also, be sure that all the people to be included in your photos know
to stay in the room the photos are being taken until all the groups are
done. If someone slips off because they think they are through being photographed
and it turns out that they are needed for an impromptu additional last
minute group request, everything grinds to a halt photo-wised, until someone
tracks them down and brings the back.
If you aren't careful, this could be repeated over and over again as
various people slip
outside for a smoke or to use the restroom after their group as been taken.
When this happens, it can extend the time needed for the photos by as much
as an extra half hour...and that time is probably cutting into your reception
time, too.
A lot of churches today have church services scheduled pretty soon after
the wedding concludes, so many times the photographer ends up being rushed
time wise on getting the group photos for you. I've had priests tell me
immediately after the receiving line concludes, "You have only 20
minutes to get all your groups done. We've got a church service starting
soon."
In my email to be bride before the wedding date, I always try to avoid
having this happen by asking if there is a church service planned for after
the wedding...and, if so, how soon will it begin after the wedding. I point
out that everyone will need to RUSH back in immediately if we are crowded
for time by the church. Don't let others complicate it for your photographer
by them slipping out of the room before all the group photos are taken.
Copyright, Bill Collins, 2004
Company: Cincinnati wedding photographers
Website: http://www.proweddingphotos.com
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