9 December 2011

NAMES and REFERENCES


People often ask me who are the famous people I have photographed. I am always surprised by such a request but I guess this is part of the image we have of photographers. We eventually have to meet celebrities and work on their behalf but I am always very aware of their status and of the message they have to portray in the tabloids. So, it is never an easy task to find out what they, as private client, their PR or production company are after. It is always a delicate joggling where you have to compromise your personal creativity with their demands.

It is also a good opportunity now after more than a decade in London to flip through my folders and revisit those people. I do not like to use the term "famous" or "celebrity" because it always create that gap between you (the photographer) and the subject which is not the best way to approach a session. Anyway, you may find some names you heard of in the following random list I am putting together. I will put in bracket their "title" and you may visit Wikipedia to know more about them. They are quite a few missing...well...

So here follows people I have been asked to photographed who have some kind of celebrity status if you want. They are plenty of them I have met and photographed but that I will not mention as they were not the people I was commissioned to photograph. It wouldn't be fair to make some self-promotion just by circumstances.

P D JAMES(novelist) REBECCA LENKIEWICZ(playwright/screenwriter) JOE PENHALL(playwright/screenwriter) ALAN HOLLINGHURST(writer) JOHN KING(writer) STEPHEN FRY(comedian/tv presenter) CHRSITOPHER BIGGINS(actor) HENRY PORTER(writer) TOM McCARTHY(writer/artist) TONY HADLEY(singer/actor) HELEN CHADWICK(singer) MICHEL PICOLI(actor) PATRICE LECONTE(film director) IOAN GRUFFUDD(actor) PADDY CONSIDINE(actor/film director) OM PURI(actor) ALISON STEADMAN(actress) SUSAN LYNCH(actress) JONATHAN RHYS MEYERS(actor) EMMI ROSSUM(actress) RICHARD COYLE(actor) ROBERT PUGH(actor) JOHN HENSHAW(actor) PHILIPPA COUSINS(film director) JEAN-MARC PUISSANT(set designer) YAN-SHU(choreographer) LARS ELLING(artist) ALESSANDO RAHO(artist) PAUL FRYER(artist) POLLY MORGAN(artist) ANTHRAX(band) ZEBRAHEAD(band) THE QUEEN, THE BAD AND THE UGLY(band) HARD-FI(band)


Now, I think it is also important I mention my full name. Because sadly when it comes to weddings, and especially with the digital flooding, most people are sceptical about your professionalism( which is understandable). My full name is DAVID BOULOGNE, and I use the davidB for the commercial aspect of my work in order not to confuse people. I do quite a few things beside wedding photography. You could say I am an artist/photographer (it is always very complicated to find the right term but I thing this is the closest) and I am showing my works in various exhibitions. I have had the privilege in the last few years to present my work with some high profile names, which make me very proud indeed as it feels I am going in the right direction somehow. So here follows a list of people I have been sharing art with. Here again I will only mention a few:

Magnum in Motion (agency), William Eggleston, Hannah Starkey, Gregory Crewdson, Cindy Sherman, Martin Parr, Bruce Gilden, Elliott Erwitt, Simon Roberts, David Lynch, Wim Wenders, Stephen Gill, Nadav Kander, Peter Marlow, Simon Wheatley, Jean-Loup Sieff, Peter Lindbergh, Sarah Moon, Kate Barry, Anne Deniau, Thierry des Ouches, Wolfe Von Lenkiewicz, Peter Suchin, Justin Coombes, Shezad Dawood, David Birkin, Douglas White, Martin Sexton


So I hope this will answer the question and make it official. It is also a good way for me to remember. I hope this list will make a difference in people's perception about what I do and give them a new perspective. But to me a person is a person, no matter unknown or famous they are, my eye is interested in capturing your inner beauty. Beauty is everywhere and there is a lot of it in weddings. Even if digital make it sound easier it simply doesn't. Most photographers shoot too much nonsense. Quantity is the opposite to quality as we know but it becomes more relevant today with the new technology. And what I produce is QUALITY with QUANTITY, and I know that very few people can still today deliver such expectation.
Look, analyze, feel images. Images are simply not only pictures, they are EMOTIONS OF A REAL, SOMETHING PRICELESS. Choose carefully your wedding photographer.

Today they are more and more apparently GOOD or CHEAP DEALS thanks to the combination of recession/digital. The truth always comes after you have pre-paid. Those deals do not give you anything valuable. If you pay cheap it's because what you will get is cheap, that's as simple as that. Not only you will have lost your precious money but you will also be disappointed with the result. And therefore you will have to rebook someone else which is nonsense.
Sorry to remind you again but the most precious thing left after your wedding is pictures.
Do not rely on wedding magazines, they tell you what you want to hear. They only want to sell their gloss. That may sound
a bit old fashion but it isn't. I hear so many sad stories and that upsets me. Photography is my life and to work my best out to capture beauty on your behalf is a real joy and delectable hard work. Good images don't come easy. It is a very long process of knowledge, experience and sensitivity. DO NOT RELY ON MOBILE PHONES, CHEAP SLR, AMATEURS OF ALL SORTS, ETC...

By investing in the right professional you will not only cherish your images for ever but you will also save money and generate positive energy.

20 October 2011

SPIELBERG AND SCORSESE - SAME FIGHT


You may have also found some interesting article in your daily free papers from artist Tacita Dean. Her latest large scale installation in the Turbine Hall of the Tate Modern has almost been jeopardized because the radical shift experienced in the industry. There is no right or wrong as far as I am concerned. The trouble lies in an economical and ideological radicalism where digital has taken over film. Film is almost gone and therefore our choices have become reduced. Today's policy is either digital or...digital. Such a shame for so many reasons that I am not going to discuss again here.

27 September 2011

NEW PACKAGES



Thank you so so much for the album - it is perfect, we absolutely love it and it will help us to remember each moment of our amazing day for many years. Thank you!


2exposures has always been alternative, creative, dedicated and honest when it comes to deliver high standard wedding photography. We have always been set apart for producing quality and quantity. But most importantly we were the pioneer in giving away all the materials away to our newly weds. Since our start, we have been trough quite a adjustments with the technological trends and expectations. Needless to say that we always take in consideration many new alternatives but we also pay attention to what they are too often hiding sadly. We do not wish to adopt any new trick or the sake of it. What matters most to us is to find the right balance in what the new has to offer at its best. We have to be certain that your materials will be cherished for a long time at the best quality and format.

At first we were using films and providing all the prints on a 6x4 format into a stylish wooden box. You kept the negs at no extra cost. Albums were versatile, bespoke and suiting your budget as a separate contract.
Then we moved towards a mix of film and digital. You would pick the camera style and we would adapt it to produce the new online coffee table books. You kept the negs or a DVD with all the materials high res. The pictures were again presented in a box and you would order the album separately.

Today, we propose to work mainly from digital high res. A lot of being shot to capture every angle of you special day. Everything is edited, retouched with subtlety and delivered high res. on DVD with a convenient save to apply to most computers if you want to run a slide show or open easily with a preview software. But the new thing we have been testing in the last few months is that we are delivering a bespoke coffee table book with most options. We ask you to make you selection with your favorites, the ones you certainly don't want too. You can upgrade the format, the amount of pages for a little extra fee. You can then later order extra copies directly online for very competitive prices. We have a complete control over the production and editing process.
This option has been a real success so far and we aim to keep it for a while.

davidB having worked for the best professional photographic laboratories in Paris and for the most successful photographers has the eye and experience to deliver the best results on paper, either with colour or black and white materials.

Do not hesitate to ask for more details. Visit our website and the related links. There is a lot of useful info that you won't find anywhere else.
Note Some photography lovers are still occasionally asking for film. Do not worry, we are still very much moved by such request and will keep providing it. Simply email us at david@2exposures.com in order to obtain a quote.

25 September 2011

BOOK COLLABORATION




Here is a new example of our services. We have been commissioned to capture the formal part of a birthday party for two hours. But the overall celebration gathered people from all around the world for 3 days. As we were, obviously, not assigned to cover the whole celebration our client wanted to include candid photographs taken by the guests. We were delighted to join forces and produce a story book with materials from various sources in order to make a wish come true.

23 August 2011

POLAROID BOOK

On the recent wedding I work on, the bride and groom had a great idea to collect instant memories. Obviously my task is to tell a stories gathering all the love and details, but I think there is an important part of our memory that relates to more casual visuals. Too often nowadays digital compacts and mobile phones have infested the very special wedding event. Instead, purchase a light and bulky polaroid camera. Ask a friend to photograph your guests in the evening and stick all those images in a classic photo album. You can even take it with you straight to you honeymoon if you wish.
You can buy polaroid cameras and films too online. That is a little investment but in the end you get an instant result and avoid a lot of work gathering, selecting, retouching, editing, etc...time is money as we say, so here is your answer. It is stress free, smart and you have more time to enjoy the event without having to worry about the pictures.

20 August 2011

TINY ARTICLE - BIG THINKING


This is what I found yesterday in the West End Final of the London Evening Standard Free Paper / Friday 19th August 2011. Nothing new to me but somehow, especially coming from a paper, a serious question is raised towards the reliability of the digital format as a whole. Either printing prints or making hardbacks are the only valuable and long lasting ways of keeping your cherished memories. That sounds a bit old fashioned but it becomes strangely revolutionary!

14 July 2011

DIALOGUE 3 FINALLY AVAILABLE

Praise the lows
By david boulogne

Simply click onto the badge to visit the book published with Blurb.

4 April 2011

WHAT FUTURE HOLDS

Photo courtesy to Jonathan Seymour

Today's reflection is going to be slightly different than usual. The recession, the depression, the harsh cuts, etc...all this make any kind of business very difficult indeed. Professional wedding photography is in deep trouble too. I never initially intended to become a wedding photographer but very quickly I realised I was good at telling wedding stories in a reportage style. Business took off instantly by 2000. I traveled to many places across UK, Italy, France and even Africa to cover very special celebrations. Until then though wedding photographer were not that popular across the photographic world. It was seen as quite cheesy and unattractive for the youngsters who tried to get on the ladder. I proposed many to assist me and teach them. Many refused and saw more prospects in Fashion and "glamorous" spheres. Nevertheless, I taught many others the job and many took that opportunity to realised it wasn't for them, but at least they tried and moved on. But in the end being a wedding photographer was a real job ( and still is to me, not anymore to most of us) because we were using the old fashion film. And consequently very very few dared taking the challenge of doing weddings. If you were talking with successful fashion photographers back then, almost all of them wouldn't actually do it, they were simply too scared of it - too much pressure, lack of knowledge and hectic pace. Not only it was really challenging technically but also you had tell a story within a determined frame. So basically to make it short, you can't lie. The negatives were there to prove whether you were good or not. You had to provide quantity, quality, good framing, good lighting, good organizer, good emotions, good story line, good creativity, good adaptation,etc...the list is long. That is the reason why professional wedding photographers were a small community and you had either the good ones and bad ones. And I was busy, very busy in fact. Up to 50 weddings a year. When you have all those parameters to deal and have a 100% control over, it is not simply a job, it is a passion, a dedication.

Why did I specialized in wedding photography? Well for very obvious reasons. First, people always get married and that will never change. Secondly, when you are good a something you try to stick to it. Also, I quickly realised that my main interest was journalism and for many reasons the journalism I loved didn't exist anymore. The wedding reportage was the perfect way of mixing pleasure and work. Also, most people back then would book your service between 1 year to 6 months in advance. You could therefore plan your other projects and personal life around it. But before all it is about passion. In fact every single wedding is interesting. It is up to you to decide whether what you are being paid for is just a job or a challenge, a passion. I always put myself on the edge when I am about to photograph a wedding. I love this balance of experience and right amount of improvisation. That is what reportage is about, and whether it is a wedding or a demonstration. Sadly, in the last 10 years, I have met so many suppliers who are being commissioned and who complain and moan. Well, my advice is get an other job.



In 2005 I created 2exposures with a partner. Digital was improving fast and most wedding photographers left film for digital. I decided to stick to film - why you are wondering? Well, there are two ways to anticipating the future and make your business look unique ( and for the good reasons though). If everyone moves to digital it automatically opens the doors to a wider pound of potential competition. By using film I though a margin wouldn't understand and recognize it's obvious advantages. There is nothing wrong with good competition but I have a real problem with the bad one. The problem most photographers create for themselves is that they all thought digital was better and would save them money. In the end, everybody nowadays own a "decent" digital compact or SLR and everybody see themselves almost as good as professionals.
Photographers have to lower their fees, spend more time retouching and therefore lose money. But there is no other way around it because there is too much competition. Conclusion: wedding photography quality is going down very quickly.
The trouble is that technology has little to do with being professional. What makes someone special is his eye and ability to tell stories with sensitivity. What we see today is just an accumulation of visual emptiness. Everything looks sharp, grand, it blows to your face but when you step back and intend to look in details there is nothing. It simply could be any other wedding, there is nothing personal. We live in a society of templates.

We are still in a recession or depression or reflection - something like that. Many newcomers proposed very low fares. And there are so many of them that somehow the new clientele sees that range of prices as a normal and correct one. Unfortunately for them the actual average fee of £800 according to many glossy magazines is way below professional wedding photography. Also, remember that we are still in a recession and that they are more people out there ready to corruption and lies. Meaning that many online ads propose an amazing fee of £600 per day. I just wonder what you get for that?! Rubbish certainly but in the end I am pretty certain you will have to spend the double to obtain satisfaction because in the end this is you wedding day and this is special. Instead you could have spent the same amount of money with someone reliable and creative and you would have had more. A bit silly isn't it? Most top talented photographers I know really struggle and 2exposures is way below what I anticipated this year. I arrive to this difficult and painful situation to question the very essence of my passion. It sadly comes to the conclusion that Photography is dead. Not totally maybe but for a while. What is happening is the wedding industry is not only happening in other photographic areas but across the creative industries. For most people it seems so easy to be an artist of all sorts just by using digital devices and apps and the likes. To be a professional in the art sector is to be reliable, creative and passionate. If the future of wedding photography is to become a template, formal and bland I might give it a break and reconsider mine.

25 February 2011

BESPOKE BOOKS

"Richard & Olfat" Wedding book made by 2exposures with other supplier's materials.
Cover only shown. No preview available for that particular order.

I have been asked few times to make bespoke coffee table books from other materials than mine. That is something I never refuse as I really enjoy making them. It is also a good opportunity to see what other photographers do. I recently finished one. It was a very revealing experience for the groom and myself. The wedding took place in central London in some very posh venues. It was a small intimate celebration in three acts. First, a civil ceremony followed by a drinks reception for lunch. Then, drinks followed by diner in a very famous private club with more guests. Finally a small gathering for a blessing ceremony a week later.

I accepted the challenge to build a story from an event I never took part of and the deadline was also tight. I asked my client to explain to me in details what happened and how he wanted it. He gave me a couple of invitations to include and all the images the photographer delivered. I asked him to make a selection of the "must have" ones and a "candid" ones.

First I had a look at the materials...and what a disaster it was! The photographer on duty had no clue what he was doing. I wouldn't even call this person a photographer. Out of 500 images I only counted maybe 3 which were framed, sharp and lighten up properly. None of them had a story to tell. I was appalling photography. Those people should never have the possibility to present themselves as what they pretend to be. I was outraged not only because he ruined this couple's wedding pictures but also because those people are an insult to the trade. That is why I keep on insisting and proposing a body which would dissect, analyze and judge the profession. That body would ban, help and accredit freelancers. But not such thing exists and it will take a while before it happens.

Anyway, my anger gone I started working on the selection, retouching, editing, etc...but I was also thinking that it takes two to tango. And this "photographer" was not the only one to blame. Those people get somehow the job because the clients they are facing have no interest and/or knowledge about what they are dealing with. If you are about to spend a certain amount of money into a service and especially if you decide to use lush facilities, you want it to be remembered in the best possible way then. If you want a good venue, good food, you need good photography, don't you think? Well, it is funny to say that because somehow everybody knows how important the photographer is but more and more often people are reluctant to pay for a good one and spend the money elsewhere. I am not saying that because this is my trade, but after the wedding there will be only one real way to remember all the efforts and happiness then experienced and that would be through the images produced by the professional. And in the end they waste their money, get nothing for it and have to pay more to save the little available. That doesn't make any sense to me I am afraid.

I was a bit concerned a couple of years ago when I was being assaulted by guests who carried an affordable compact digital. Not because they would steal my job but because people's appreciation would go down. I think we got over that and most of us realize that digital is convenient and cheap but it takes a pro to get good pictures. It is about knowledge, education and respect. I will not pretend to be a Dj tomorrow because there is a cheap and easy software that makes me feel like. That is just the surface of things. To make someone special takes many years of learning , experience, taste and challenge.

When I took the challenge to work on that last book order, I knew that the result would not be great but I knew I would do my best to enhance the poor quality and make something tangible from it. That's where digital is great technology if you know how to use it. It could have been much better if in the first place a good photographer would have been in duty.
But bare in mind that the experience I am highlighting is far from isolated. Bad photographers are everywhere and they have developed the digital tricks to make you believe the opposite. Please pay attention, ask for great service, skills in organizing and photographing, simply look for quality. Photography is the most valuable service to book and will always be. I know too many people who are in tears because they have either lost or booked the wrong person. You have to be demanding and involved.

To conclude, if you have your wedding images as digital files and wish to make an album, do not hesitate to contact me what ever quality you have been given. I will do my best to make it look good. You can have samples of them online with Blurb publishing. Enter 2exposures in the top box and click enter www.blurb.com
Or simply click the icon below to have a little perspective of what I do.

1 January 2011

LAST 2010 FEED BACK


I received a top comment on the last day of 2010 from groom Jono's parents my Blurb page. The words are kind, constructive and dearly appreciated. It is very touching to find a feed back that perfectly describes what my photographic approach is about.It makes my 2010 complete. And strangely enough Mr Whale from Australia really looks like Santa Claus!

We might be just a tad biased, but this book encapsulates the magic of a very special day in September 2009. David doesn't just capture the images (though he does so brilliantly - exceptional photography!), somehow he evokes the whole mood - the fluttering excitement of the bride-to-be, the buzz of the bridesmaids, the magic of the ceremony and the joy of the celebration. Could not recommend him too highly.

Barbara and Gary Whale

posted at 04:19am Dec 31 PST

20 December 2010

17 December 2010

HYPER-REALISM

The industry is changing quickly, very quickly in fact. And when things are changing so quickly it means that the industry is looking for something fundamental to establish, something to grasp avidly because it is losing track. The problem I am going to develop now is not relevant only to wedding photography but to photography in general. How our aspirations anticipate our imagery interpretation.
The art of reportage is to capture and communicate a feeling in a form which not only original but also driven by honesty and a sense of reality. Reportage doesn't perform by transforming our vision of the daily in a different dimension but it has the ability to transcend the real by highlighting a beauty that most people cannot perceive. Reportage is about observation and it is a philosophy of life. To photograph in that vein is a constant analysis of the world. Photography helps us to understand more the world we live in and our role. That is the reason why most reportage photographers have a critical mindset and have been predominantly engaged in conflicts. Obviously wedding reportage is not aimed at criticizing the event but it is engaged in capturing that other side of human nature, and that is about happiness and its beauty in the widest sense. Wedding photography focuses on the admirable and essential magnificence of life.
And to capture it in various forms is an art that very few can perform on a regular basis.

Now, the traditional reportage golden age had its own quite specific quality and is long gone. Today the spectrum is very wide in its presentation and contents and can widen for many years. The trouble of today is that this multiplicity of representations hide a certain lack of rigor and real essence. The more you use tricks the more obvious it becomes that your content is very weak. And that phenomenon affects deeply the wedding industry as it remains an open, autonomous and non-body supervised. It is therefore very difficult for customers to actually know what they want in the first place, and secondly be confident that what they pay for will be delivered accordingly.

That is why digital technology is helping the mediocre to perform relatively well. It is quite astonishing actually that most people in the last couple of years I propose the film alternative saw me as a foul. Digital is supreme nowadays and if you use film people don't think you are a professional whereas it should be the other way around. Anyway after many adjustments and reflections I decided to provide digital only. Never mind the film, it doesn't change the approach to the subject and the essence of reportage photography. The trouble though lies in the fact that digital technology open then doors to fictional reality such as Hyper-realism or CGI technology.

Photography is a very broad industry. Digital is perfect to serve certain branches such as advertising, food, fashion, etc...because it aims to produce some kind of imaginary that doesn't exist. That is what most advertisers, graphic designers and so one have done from the start. There is nothing new as it is the very core of their industry with or without digital technology. But real reportage is the antithesis to that. You can though spot or slightly retouch your images like it has always been with brushes and pencils in the past, you do it with Photoshop today. Instead of reinforcing the highlights and soften the shadows under the enlarger, you do it again with the software. But in any case reportage aims to capture reality at its best but there is a certain limit to the quality we can pretend to. Even the old fashion reflex cameras had already a excellent quality superior to the eye. Not only the perfection and accuracy increase tremendously but that has been enhanced by the softwares.

We are now reaching that supra real reality all over everywhere. And I find it a shame that it is being used more and more often in the wedding world. Firstly, because it is not what reportage is about. Secondly because it is a lie. If you manage to get all the formal bits correctly plus creative and original visuals within the time frame imposed you are a good wedding photographer, and you know that visual perfection doesn't exist. But your ability to transcend the reality then present with your personal style and instinct is definitely a skill. To then take those materials to the fictional world is something else that reportage has nothing to do it. To get good highly retouched images is not reportage, it is studio, staged, fake, modified, etc...there is nothing genuine and personal. It looks highly valuable and skillful but it is sadly generic and blend.

Beauty is not about perfection, beauty is about imperfection but captured to its best.
Hyper-realism, CGI and the likes have nothing to do with honest reportage photography.
But it seems to be the technology people prefer nowadays...well, let's see in a few years.
This debate is simply about whether you enjoy the real world or not. That is a philosophy of life.

12 October 2010

NEWS - DIGITAL ONLY

Dear all, due to the pressure from the market and to keep 2exposures up on running for the years to come davidB has decided to provided the same standard of high quality wedding reportage photography using Digital technology as a first priority. Customers dedicated to film and its advantages will still be able to order it at request.

6 October 2010

MINIMAL AND CREATIVE COUPLES SHOTS part 1

In this new chapter I am trying to show how couples shots can be done everywhere in fact. Many couples are concerned about how grand or amazing the location must be. In fact to have the privilege of having such a environment requires a certain budget which might now be available to all. Also, in some cases, admirable venues are in the center of town. If they permit to experience a very special setting they are not ideal for creative shots.
I have worked regularly in the very same venue and my policy is always to change my angle and approach. I never reproduce the same. I simply find it too easy, not challenging and I love to explore new fields. And most importantly I am trying to find an style that perfectly suits the couple I am working for.

The first image depicts the couple hugging and sharing some intimacy. The venue was quite exquisite in fact, but the weather conditions didn't allow me to enhance the large grounds of Woodstock Manor. Therefore I opted for something more personal and classic mixed with emotions. It is a tender and strong composition that works most especially with the two glasses displayed as symbols. By simply using the stoned fence I can give a sense of grandeur to the place indirectly. And by having a exposure quite dark I enhance the feelings rather than reality experienced.

In my second shot the couple chose to use the Queen's tennis club grounds in Fulham for their reception. Despite being a sort of landmark, the options for romanticism are quite limited not only because you have tennis courts, but also because the buildings around the club are quite unattractive. But, it such situations you can actually use those problems and turn them into something original if you have in mind the final result. Also, I had to deal which a certain difference of heights between the two characters. That is why I decided to compose in such a way, using some kind of old cartoons humor that fit perfectly with the people. I use the tennis court fence and make it look like a old wall. I use the old council flats in the background but make sure they are blur and focus on the energy and fun produced by the couple. I was also making sure that they had to interact with their guests who were laughing in my back.

In the following 4 images I will be explaining different approaches on the very same area. This couple chose the English Speaking Union in Mayfair. They were full of life and happiness and very open to any sorts of creativity. The two colour photographs have been taken at exactly the same place within 5 minutes. It is actually not taken by the venue but by the hotel side entrance next door. It was December the Xmas lights were already decorating the streets. I noticed that the hotel had something charming that could transmit the Xmas feel. It was just an entrance but the top black cover which formed like a mini tunnel was full of red tiny spotlights. Before the speeches I asked then to follow me for a quick session outside and they had no clue about where we were going. I did show them where I would take a new set of pictures. I explained briefly how I would do it and what I expected from them. They were a bit surprised and didn't know what to expect but they played the game and the result is great.

In the first one I asked the groom to dig into his wife's neck and cover with kisses. As it was cold outside it was a good excuse to keep them busy and close to each other. I used a bit of flash and quite a slow exposure( something like 1/15 I guess) and moved the camera in different directions baring in mind a certain composition due to the two embraced bodies. In the second picture, I asked them to face each other and to kiss tender as long as they wanted. I was using a medium relatively large aperture (4 or5.6) and quite a long exposure but NO FLASH at all. I had to hold but knowing I could keep it very still, and that very weakness would help me to get that sort of gaze, or blur where the couple seems to fly into. So basically in those two shots, there is no landmark, no view, no natural light just a dark corner, and still you can make it look like special.

Here again same couple but much earlier in the day. The sky was grey. I checked the locations few days before and tried to figure out what could be an interesting London shot in that area. There are a lot of beautiful buildings, but the streets are full of cars and emptiness somehow. Well, in the first BW I found a beautiful old fashioned butcher shop window. And as they loved food I thought that quality food in the background would please them. The architecture and the design of the background suits perfectly the BW touch. And with the lack of natural light, well exposed BW is the answer. Second shot is Sepia and is a reflection in the Rolls they hired. Making sure that the white of the dress would be on top of black surfaces in order to make the bride appear. I use the diagonals of the seats in increase the tension expressed by the kiss given to the bride by the groom.

The one below is quite interesting again because the couple got their reception at the very same venue as above. Once again, to keep up with my policy I try to find a different angle. As the weather is more clement I eventually chose to emphasize on the emptiness of Mayfair adding some flair from the sun shining through the roofs. The result is an intimate and tender embrace with a lot of genuine fun. Note that I am using quite a wide aperture to focus on that intimacy and enhance the void behind. That way the environment becomes more like a studio background.

An other couple in central London. They chose the Blake Hotel in South Kensington. Beautiful and exquisite hotel I really like. Many small corners to be used. Each bedroom has its own style and the finish of every single details is sublime. As we were outside trying to make most of the weather we had to eventually go inside to avoid the rain. The sky was quite menacing and dark, but it had some very strong highlights in some ways. I therefore asked the couple to stay close to the glass door and look at the sky. Once settled I had to find my position to grab those highlights from the sky which would balance then very well with the darkness from above. I really like this shot.


We come back to our previous couple and see how we can capture a strong sense of love with a bit of nostalgia in mind using some tricks. I asked them to walk slowly together and kiss occasionally as we where on our way back to the car. It had just rained and the pavements were still wet. I know in the back in my mind that I will not only shoot BW but that I will also turn them in Sepia. As I am walking at the same pace as theirs and using a medium speed (1/60), I can capture quite clearly the scene in keeping a bit of blur. I also know that the light from the sky clearing off with the rain will help me to get that fussy mysterious effect from the wet pavements. Here again , there is nothing much but a feeling ans some old style reportage.


A wedding in the countryside now. I got into the car with the couple after the church as we drive away from the guests who are making their way to the reception. I do not have any clue where we are going but I simply observe the landscape from one eye I observe the couple from the other. Then I see this field of crops bathing in the summer heat. I also know that I need some kind of strong contrast to frame the scene. I therefore use the door frame from the car like if I was outside the scene. That is a simple trick use a lot by artist Alison Jackson. Try to distance yourself by including an other element in between you and the subject.

Finally, a photograph from the south of France at the Rothschild villa. I took quite a few great shots using the amazing gardens and villas in the background, but I most especially like this one as it is more intimate. It expresses that warmth found in that part of France. It also take the couple away from the delicate but imposing beauty of the site. This is an humble shot using some flair like if it was a dreamy reality. The couple, some plants as a pattern and the sun - simple.

To conclude I just want to say what I tell my couples to be. Great couple shots are about you. It's not an landscape or architectural shot. I see too many couple shots nowadays where the couple represents only 5 to 10% of the image, completely lost in this gigantic manor or landscape. That can be done obviously to a certain extent but that does not reveal anything about the couple. It is a landscape shot with two people, as simple as that. I do not find this approach very honest and interesting. Couples shots are about people where the chosen environment or technique used will enhance your message through your composition and ability to direct your characters.

17 September 2010

AN ATTITUDE

MEETING THE CLIENTS

A professional is firstly someone punctual and organised. Meet up your clients in a convenient location for both parts where the access, lightning and atmosphere are good in order to gain full attention. Dress up nicely and accordingly. Be welcoming and make the couple seat next to each other. I personally show first my portfolios and engage the discussion after a couple of minutes as they comment on the photographs. It is important to clarify all the aspects of your work as you keep on looking at the work. DO NOT TRY TO HIDE THINGS YOU DON'T WANT THEM TO KNOW as it will hit you dramatically later. Explain your approach, tell the stories of each wedding displayed, explain what they really get in the end, in their hands and what are the possibilities with the goods delivered. Finally give them your full price list with terms and conditions and go through it with them and make sure they understand everything. Be always open to answer all their questions clearly after the 1st meeting. Tell them about the payments, the procedure, the contract and the delivery deadlines.
It is obviously my job to try to please everybody but I will never promise things I will never do.
Such as doing a type of photography I am not familiar with or producing goods that I do not like for their poor quality. I am very open to any suggestion but I am also a professional who knows well what he is doing and I will never compromise if I feel that what I am asked to do is not right for the client and for myself. I am just being honest and try to explain in the best possible way the gains and inconveniences of each request.

SECOND MEETING

Get more details from your clients. The list of family group shots, the maps, the running order, the service policy, etc...Explain them once more precisely the option they are going for. Always bare in mind that a couple who is about to get married is quite excited by the romance, and most of them tend not listen or read carefully the terms and conditions. Explain some key points such as possible extra costs, a meal for you on the day, the type of prints, etc...
I personally ask for my second installment here which covers 90% of my packages. History taught me to never ask for the second half of the payment at the delivery. If you are having this policy you are in big troubles. You need to make sure you have the full amount as you leave your clients with the goods.

WEDDING DAY

Always leave the house earlier that you predicted. Public transports or traffic are always subject to cancellations or works. Always expect delays! And I would advise to give yourself a good 1/2 hour before you start working to check all the locations( depending on the distance between ceremony and reception). Once more dress up nicely and accordingly. There is nothing more embarrassing than a photographer or video person wearing jeans, very formal shoes and louse shirts. That is simply not right, this is a lack of respect.
Be friendly and welcoming to everybody and especially to the bridal party. Do not start running after the bride or make a foul of yourself. You are here to work on behalf of the couple and the best way in a reportage sense is to be as discreet as possible. People have other things to worry than the photographer. Make the bride relaxed or think of someone else, be helpful with tips when needed, explain in short what is going to happen with the group shots later to the bridesmaids, siblings and/or parents. Try to make this first part a peaceful and quality time. Leave the bride when needed to reach the ceremony location in time before she arrives
Have a chat with the person in charge of the ceremony in order to know exactly what is the policy and deal accordingly. Try to make the best out of it.
The drink reception is usually a rather simple task but you have to make sure you can organise four different types of photography ( portraits, table decorations, couples, groups) within the short break allocated. YOU HAVE TO BE VERY ORGANISED, STRICT AND PROCEED IN ORDER OF RELEVANCE.
Introduce yourself to the toastmaster if there is one.
Do not take portraits on behalf of guest, you are here on behalf of the couple!
Be fluid and and fast with portraits. Take the couple for a first short session. Get the ushers or siblings to help you 10 minutes you start the group shots. Tell them where, when and how you want to proceed. Get them done and make sure the couple doesn't get involved in the chaos and their smile may eventually disappear in that painful moment. Take the couple for a second session. Photograph the tables 10 minutes before they walk in as there are all dressed up.

Walk in of the couple, food, situations, people chatting, etc...make yourself familiar with the room and the congregation. Always remember that everybody is sitting and that you are standing, therefore people can see you from the distance. Your skills as being discreet will be tested at this stage. I personally do rounds of 10 minutes maximum. There is no point in insisting and staying the room constantly as the guests will feel like being observed and therefore impossible to portray correctly.
Speeches: here again make yourself invisible, do not stand between the top table and the guest, that's very bad.
Cake: get yourself a good position
1st dance: Make sure you get sharp pictures as the lights might be quite low.

DELIVERY

Make the couple aware of the quality produced. Arrange a date for the delivery. Let them know beforehand about the final amount to be paid if relevant. Spend a good half hour looking at the pictures together when it is possible. Show them about potential albums at a later stage ( in my case anyway) Get your final payment. And stay in touch with them.

FINAL NOTE

Be open, smart and passionate about your work. Be creative and do a lot of other types of photography. If you only do weddings you will quickly become sterile. I love doing weddings because I see something else in them that most people don't. A wedding is a story about love and if you don't like this idea do something else. There is no point in trying to force yourself as you will end up depressed and bitter. Be honest, genuine and accommodating. But never compromise if your instinct tells you. I personally love to be surrounded by genuine talented suppliers and couples as it takes the quality to the top. I am not tempted to produce a mediocre materials in exchange of success. Never be complacent. And finally, many people keep saying that the "customer is king". I do not agree with this policy which will make your head spin in all directions. Always produce the best effort you can to satisfy your clients instead. Knowledge, dedication and good guidance are the keys to please your couple.

18 August 2010

SIGNING AT THE CHURCH

Every single church and priest have their own policy and in Great Britain most especially. Or let's say that the Church of England has a very versatile and strong position regarding Photography compare to what we can encounter elsewhere. There are some good and bad sides as always.
The first advice I would give the photographer and the couple to be is to ask beforehand what the policy is. Each policy is very peculiar to the Father, or Priest in charge. There is no common rule across the whole institution. Each priest applies his/her own view on the matter. And each person has a personal experience and will let the photographer move and flash according to the space allocated or permitted, according to the couple's personality or according his/her ethics.

The first two pictures are from the same wedding. The first one depicts the father of the groom who happens to be also the groom's witness and he is signing. As usual I did ask the Father to introduce me to his policy and he clearly said that photographs of the signings had to be posed. The trouble here is that most of the time the witnesses cannot be captured because of that policy.
I therefore agreed before the service started and got closer to the table where the parents and couple were gathering as they were signing one after the other. The trick is that you can pretend to photograph the other people has the priest is focused on his duty with the witness. But in fact you can steal quickly one or two shot while he is busy working. After pressing the shutter release I turn my lens in the other direction to pretend that I paying attention to the other scene. That trick is actually quite easy to achieve especially if you are working with digital. With film it becomes a bit more tricky as you really need to have decent light in the church in order to photograph without flash otherwise the priest would be definitely aware of what is going on.

The second photograph is the formal one the priest asked for. But most of my customers don't really like it to be frank. But as long as you know both the score, there is no one to blame and you play the game.

The third photograph is the sort of setting which is perfect for some sort of compromise between reportage and formal style. The space you are in is flexible enough to try different angles and to have some distance. It is a classic shot, but a honest and direct one. A bit of flash with the real actual signing in process.

Sometimes the atmosphere is very friendly and the priest is very open to any sort of pictures as long as it doesn't take too long. So if you place yourself ideally between the couple and the parents you can not only capture the signing properly but you can also catch a wide range of portraits and emotions between the two sides. Here the groom as he sits down.


Then he kisses his bride. Not posed, they really wanted to kiss. Do not forget that most of the time a piece of music is being played while we are signing. If the music has stopped for quite a while and you are still taking pictures, you are in danger zone. And the priest will let you know. Learn to be as efficient as possible is those mini moments and macro spaces, and work in order. Formal and important ones first, more creative and subtle in between or at the end.

The photograph above was a hard one. The couple did ask the priest what was his policy and we knew that pictures were quite restricted but we were not really ready for such a harsh line. He basically said no pictures at all during the whole service. Except a couple of formals with the couple signing. So, no walking in, no walking out, no long lens, nothing...I therefore kept my patience and tried to gather few shots before the bride arrived. I then sat at the back of the church to see how the priest behaved. As we approached the signing I walked towards the registrar and made sure my flash was not on and waited for the priest to be busy doing something else. I shot...and he heard the click of my film camera, and said quite loud " No pictures I told you, behave yourself or I will have you out !" The best is those situations is to play stupid. Do not try to make a point or to be right. This is a religious site for someone's wedding. We do not care if you are right or wrong. I just excused myself and said I misunderstood what he meant before the ceremony started. I then took the formal ones as planned. We got a bit of tension, but I got the picture the couple wanted.

In some cases the priest will try to intervene in your job. As an illustration I just show the hands of this priest while I am photographing the actual signing. But in some cases the priest is standing in front of me in purpose. In fact, the whole trouble comes from one's interpretation. When the couple ask if I can take pictures, the priest will always say yes. When I turn up at the church it is a slight different story. The priest indicates me where I have to stand and not move. Tells me what I should photograph and when. Sometimes the whole situation is a bit strange. Give a big smile, be nice and patient and make most of it.

Flash is always recommended as you do the formal pictures of the couple signing. It is important to use it to get the sharpest image possible but also to show off. Meaning that the parents always expect from the official photographer to have some professional equipment to be displayed and the pro flash is a good tool to make that statement. But also take as many atmospheric ones without it especially if you are working with digital. Try not to forget the witnesses too.
To conclude I would say that most of this sort of picture is very precious to the parents such as the formal group ones. You cannot afford to miss it. They are not really creative but they have to be dead right, perfectly composed and lighten up, and with good expressions. And you HAVE TO DO IT VERY QUICKLY as you have to get ready for the walking out now. No rest for the pro! Maybe 5 minutes in 3 hours time...if you are lucky.

28 July 2010

PORTRAITS AT WEDDINGS


There is no better place than wedding for taking great portraits. Why ?

- The bridal party is mostly focused on making the big day a perfect one and therefore they have little time to allocate to posing (in my style of photography especially). They fully rely on my experience to capture the expressions as the day goes by. Which is great because the best portraits you can get are the non-posed ones.

- My fluid and honest reportage style makes the couple concentrate on enjoying the day as if I wasn't there and that is why they choose my approach. Being a good wedding reportage photographer is like being a third eye. You have to know a little bit about the couple beforehand in order to enter the event like if you were part of the audience. Too many photographers only turn up on the day and make people feel uncomfortable, not only the guests but most importantly the bridal party. You cannot expect having a lot of great portraits if you sort of gate crash a wedding even if you are the official photographer. By meeting the couple beforehand and explaining your work you will diffuse an aura which will be know by quite a few people before you do the job. To know as a couple that you hired someone special will make your task much easier and beneficial.

- I mostly use an 85mm and 105mm for my single portraits. I do not believe that you can take great portraits either if you are too far or too close from the subject. Those two lenses are perfect to enter circles without being intrusive. They also help to isolate the subject from the background if use at 4 or 5.6 aperture. Use the blur effect created from the semi long lens to create some distance in order to isolate the subject. I personally love the 50mm and 35mm but they are more for situations. You can still take some great portraits though with a 50mm depending on the situation.


- But what makes a good portrait after all? Adequate equipment is required of course, but what matters ultimately are you eye, your brain and social understanding of human behaviours. You can obviously guess what sort of reactions will emerge from such and such traditional format but there numerous opportunities that are simply unrehearsed and genuine. You have to understand how people relate to each other first. That step should anticipated from the prior meeting with the couple who will tell you or express a sentiment towards their closest families. Then you have the close friends who will gather automatically haven't seen each other for a while. You can also sense the moods from each table walking around in the first 15 minutes of the seat down dinner. I have a tip for that. I usually walk around and pretend to shoot by pressing the flash independently if I use film, or by just wasting data with digital. After that first procession people will understand that you will be taking photographs while they are eating, they know the score. Later you will see them being aware of the situation and most of them will play the game by being natural and at their best. That way it's already half of the job done. You only have then to scan the diner area and have eyes and ears in you back to know what is going on at any time.


- When I take pictures during diner I always position myself in the way that I can photograph from 2 or 3 different angles to capture different situations and people. While I wait and try to portrait someone form whom nothing seems to appear I can hear a giggle in my back. I know that the second person is in my sight despite facing opposite direction. I a split seond I turn around and capture that person without her noticing. By doing so you usually impress people for being so quick and generate expression from your first subject which you can then portrait by coming back to your first position.

- Taking a portrait can be a game of mouse and cat. Some people hate having their photograph taken and they let you know it in a blink of an eye. Personally if I know that such person is not so involved in the wedding by being a stranger almost I will give up after three attempts. If the person if important to the story if will do my bets to understand her weakness and to capture her when she expects it the least. Beauty is in the vulnerability after all, when ll the barriers disappear and you feel naked. Some people would say it is being intrusive or misplaced, I would call it beauty.


- By tradition people related to a good portrait when it shows an old or young person. I would say it is easy because their appearance expresses nostalgia in the wrinkles of youth with playfulness. I do take those portraits of course but they are quite easy to get as the first group knows well about what it means or inspires, and the second one is always doubtful and shy. In both cases there is an established dialogue we could long discuss about, but what matters to us here is what is in between. Between 15 and 60 you will find it a bit more difficult to get a grip because there is a sort of wall in general, there is misplaced competition. But it is up to the photographer to make people feel at ease. You have to express by your attitude that you can somehow understand each individual and capture a sort of essence. And you can only do that if you love social/reportage photography and if you have compassion. If you treat your subjects like numbers, you will never get anywhere and every wedding will look the same - distant and uninspired.

22 June 2010

JEWISH WEDDINGS


I love working on Jewish weddings. They are rich, emotional, traditional, fun and sweaty! The pictures I am showing are from lovely Rose and Jeremy in London. The preparation doesn't necessarily involve bridesmaids but the very close family. There is usually some kind of tension whether it is silence or chaos. The act of marriage in the Jewish culture is something very serious despite couples looking quite relax about it. While the bride is getting ready, the groom goes to the synagogue and has his own ceremony with his ushers, parents and rabbi.


As the guests starts arriving they are being asked to sit genders apart, one half sitting opposite to the other. Whether before, during or after ( all depending on the synagogue facilities) the bride enters discreetly a separate room with her relatives. The groom has to leave the guests and invites his ushers to join him on his way to his bride to be. This ceremony is called the Bedekken and consists in recognizing and acknowledging that the woman here present is the one he accepts to marry. She usually wears the veil as he walks in, and he has to unveil her face and to agree to the rabbi that she is the one. They then walk into the main hall of the synagogue leading the procession and the whole bridal party in between the male and female sides.


They finally arrive at the chuppah which is the tent displayed on a large alter where the couple and parents of each side will gather to proceed to the core of the ceremony. It starts with the walking in circle 7 times around the groom, exchanges of vows, drinking of wine and breaking of glass by the groom. They then sign the traditional registrar with the Jewish calendar. In some occasion like the wedding presented today the couple will walk to an opposite altar which will be open only to them when they can see their future or the unseen, that's what happen here at Bevis Marks in the City.


Then we proceed to the reception. Group shots have to be performed in a military efficiency. Those are highly important more than in any other type of ceremony. You have to be sharp and bossy. When you are done with the groups and the couple shots, the MC will ask the guests to seat down as the couple is preparing to make a special entrance. And contrary to other cultures we start here with dancing and the chairs. The groom and the bride will be taken apart and be sat on a chair that will be elevated in the air. Each gender group will try to make the sitter sick somehow and will then produce a sort of dance in the air between the bride and groom. Once they had enough, they come down to the floor and dance with their mates. The boys can be quite excited and virulent! that usually last for 15/20 minutes. The you get called for starter.



Depending on the families and traditions but sometimes guests are being asked to dance between each course. Speeches will be performed in a traditional way, and toasts to the Queen are quite a standard. You also have a traditional ceremony where a glass is being praised and passed across key members of the congregation.


After all those traditional bits and the cutting of the cake, you have finally the first dance and the big party. The dancing usually never stops until the band calls the last score. That will be a final dance with all the guests making a circle and crushing the couple in a tremendous final.


As a photographer you have to be utterly prepared and confident. You also have to allocate responsively your time between creativity and formal needs, the formal needs being here a priority. There is no time for rest if you want to do a great job, but all the materials are out there to make it look great. Jewish weddings are the ultimate test as a wedding photographer and I love them!

6 June 2010

VALUE AND PRICE


Photography and especially digital photography is so available nowadays, so democratic. Whether you are an amateur or a professional, an relatively affordable investment is all what you need to take pictures. No need to know about the different films, the papers, the labs. No need to know about the basics of photography such as lightning, exposure, bracketing, frame while you shoot. The technology has improved so much that cameras and softwares make your life easy. No need to ask for a graphic designer to do your website. You can do your own blog for free and many other companies propose templates that you can have control directly from your desktop. Well, as you can imagine it is not something I am fully supportive of. Don't get me wrong, I completely agree that progress makes our life easier and enhance somehow the average quality of what's on the market. I use the term here somehow because this is what we perceive, or I shall say what the technology aims us to feel. But in fact, that technology doesn't really deliver and only pretends.

By leveling the mainstream it does so by the bottom. Everything looks pretty good on surface. It takes someone with knowledge about the medium to understand what lies behind. And obviously the whole idea of presenting portfolios or highlights has never been the best way to truly understand the talent. Folios, websites and others only present the best stuff which is fair enough if you are specialised in food photography, design, landscapes, etc...photography that requires time on one specific subject at the time. But when it comes to reportage you need to approach someone's work in a completely different perspective. It has to be good, creative, personal and consistent, not to mention the photographer's personality on the day. And that is something you cannot see from a website really. Most photographers would show you one truly great shot of one particular wedding and would move on to the next wedding. To my opinion this is not being honest. But this is what our societies have been driven for decades now. As little people have knowledge about the trade they get excited about the flashy bits. And on their wedding day or after this is a very different bitter story. This is what is happening for the last two years especially.

The recession came on, the digital quality increased and ways of promoting become almost free, therefore everybody wants to be a wedding photographer as there is little work left in other industries. Because wedding photography has never been taken seriously from the professional milieu, all sorts of amateurs come in and lower the dedication and quality.
I was an amateur too 10 years ago, but I studied in the best schools and worked in the top environments dedicated to outstanding quality. And when I started on the market I had a certain experience about the trade from its history, lab, computer, studio and street photography. I just had to put all that into practice. And I always reinvent and diversify my projects to keep my wedding practice fresh and creative. All that dedication, whether it is photography or graphic design, architecture, cooking etc... deserves a certain salary. Because your passion is your life, and it keeps on expanding, and you keep on improving.

Today everything looks the same. And amazingly a lot of stuff looks truly great. But if you know how to read an image like I have been taught, you realise that most productions out there are fake. Most photography and wedding reportage included is heavily retouched. Most photographers nowadays rely on the retouching to make their visual look appealing. A good journalist should be someone who doesn't almost touch the photograph. Look at most website and you see some kind of ideal world, clean, pure, isolated like in a bubble. This is not real life. Our lives are messy, contradictory, complex, certainly not perfect. But this is the wedding photographer's duty to capture the essence and beauty of each event within that chaos. We have to try our best always and remain invisible. I see reportage photography like being a juggler. You know the pattern and you know the tricks, everything can collapse at any time and you always want to add this extra ball.

To aim at delivering consistent quality and quantity is a risky game but truly exciting. This a lot of hard work and practice - practice is the secret - nothing new?! To handle your camera to a point that it becomes invisible to even yourself, that it becomes a simple eye extension is the real price that people should be aiming at. To capture an emotion, a tear. Being at the right place...has nothing to do with devices and technology but it has to do with your eye, your brain and your experience. You can show me the most amazing landscapes and venues where the couple is standing straight tiny in the middle, you can show me crazy effects from the flashy to the soft poetic, that doesn't turn me on. Effects are here to disturb to attention and to hide that the material is actually not so interesting. In true reportage there is no trick, no effect. Not true in fact there are some, but they are set beforehand, a split second while dancing with the action in order to immerse you in the best possible way, but never after. To manipulate after shooting is simply not right in a reportage term. This is personally not the way I understand this genre of photography. By doing so you simply prove that you missed the shot, you missed your intention and have not much to say, and you try to cover it up.

As we can see a photography doesn't cost much anymore. Compare to few years ago where a certain investment, raw dedication and time were needed. A decent camera, a zoom lens and a computer is the minimum required nowadays. In fact you could actually say that we are all photographers. But unfortunately we are not. Like any other trade, quality has nothing to do with the tool used but with the brain who is in charge. Because this brain will take you much further than any tool. And scientist are here to remind us that fact.

PHOTOGRAPHY DOESN'T COSTS ANYTHING ANYMORE, BUT GREAT PHOTOGRAPHS ARE PRICELESS BECAUSE MONEY CANNOT REPLACE THEIR MAGIC. THEIR TRUE VALUE LIES ON THE EMOTION CAPTURED IN THE EPHEMERAL, SOMETHING THAT CANNOT BE REPLACED, LIKE ONCE WE WERE YOUNG.