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How to shoot a bride in a Walmart parking lot

  As promised, here's the behind-the-scene photos from the bridals and formals I posted the other day.  This was an experiment/demonstration I did for my intern Abby, and is something I've been working on in my head for a long time.  So here it is, how to shoot a bride in a Wal-mart parking lot.

 

Photographers: Myself and Abby (my lovely intern), with Thomas shooting "behind-the-scene"

 

Models: Lybie and Ravi

Location: Wal-Mart Parking Lot

Purpose: To prove that there is ALWAYS a beautiful photo to be found, even in unsuspecting locations.

 

First, here's me :)

 

 

I have learned many principles from many people through my photography years, and I have been grateful for all these lessons.  I found a couple of these principles were most applicable to this kind of location shooting and would like to share them with y'all.

 

Principle #1 - The best photos are taken from below 3 feet and above 6 feet (while most photos you see are taken from between 3ft and 6ft, general standing/crouching height.) Here we shot from low to crop out the parking lot and other distractions to show the sky, with the tree, bush, and light post (love having the light posts in parking lots to work with!) framing her.  3 lights, fill light on the camera, main light from left, backlight from right.  Sometimes I would put a fourth light below the tree to help light it up, but the main light was doing a good job already.

 

 

...and this is what we had to work with for that shot, and the next...

 

 

Principle #2: Bokeh.  Leaving the bride and lights in the same place, I stood up and actually used the cars and parking lot as a background, but zoomed in as far as possible and dropped the f/stop for a shallow depth of field.  Now instead of obviously being cars and parking lot, it's just a lot of texture. Lybie really wanted an edgy look, and I feel like this complimented the messy-hair and unique bouquet.

 

 

 

Principle #3: Empty space is ok!  And wide open sky shots do not have to include the subject's feet.  This is a simple thing, but one I've been working on recently.  I feel that this photo would not have been pretty if we included the asphalt!  Also played with white balance - warm vs. cold plays an important role in the atmosphere of the photo.  Fill light on camera, main light from the right, car headlights as back light from the left.

 

 

Principle #4: Who cares what the background is when the subject fills the frame?

 

 

 

Principle #5: Lighting is everything!!!   This is the photo I'm most proud of.  Yes, she is standing in front of a dumpster.  It might not have smelled fantastic, but we don't have to see the smell on camera!  And with the shadow from the tree on the dumpster, the car lights shooting across it, and backlight on the bride, it makes a great textured background.

 

 

...and this is what we had to work with.  Beautiful bride, but an interesting scene indeed.

 

 

And again, 200mm, shallow depth of field.  This could be a cool classy downtown night scene, but if you look really closely, you can almost read the Wal-mart "Always" sign behind them.  :)

 

 

 

So here's the deal:  I love shooting at places like Thanksgiving Point Gardens or La Caille, but at the end of the day, it's not the location that determines the quality of the photos, it's the angles, the composition, the depth of field, the lighting, and having awesome subjects to work with.  We can take a location as ordinary as a Wal-Mart parking lot and without walking more than 20 steps in any direction get a wide variety of photos.  I was so excited to have this opportunity and hope to do many more of these experiments in the near future.

 

If you'd like to see more photos (and behind the scene photos) from the session, take a look at the full gallery here.

 

 

 

 

Zilker Botanical Gardens

  I had a few minutes before the bride and groom arrived for the formals / bridals/ groomals session at the Zilker Botanical Gardens in Austin Texas a couple weeks ago, so I made sure to stop and smell the flowers!

 

 

Now I am not really one for landscape photography.  As a general rule when I see a gorgeous sunset, or a majestic mountain peak, or a colorful bed of flowers, I say to myself "OH that's beautiful.  Now I just need a person there so I can take a photo."  When I take a photo, it's usually not complete unless there is someone in the picture as well.

 

That being said, the Zilker Botanical Gardens was a special place for me when I was growing up in Austin, and I went there all the time to think.  It's one of the iconic places in Austin, and if you happen to be visiting, you should not miss it.  More photos to come from Texas, as I make progress on Katherine and Matt's wedding, and as I finish up an engagement session I ended up doing for an old friend and his beautiful fiancee.

 

 

 

 

 

Emily

  Emily Mangum was an intern with me this last winter and spring.  She and her husband Ryan moved to Boston so Ryan could finish school, so sadly we don't get to hang out that much anymore.  Emily was a fantastic intern.  She was always happy and fun to be around.  She is incredibly hardworking, and a very talented photographer.  She is also one of those people who is always positive... no matter when you talk to her she's always got a smile on her face.

 

 

Right before Emily and Ryan moved away, we did this portrait shoot for them at Nielsen's Grove in Orem.

 

 

 

These cupcakes were delicious.  Almost as delicious as her apron was cute.  Ryan, you're a lucky man!!!

 

  

  

 

Ryan and Emily are both sports fans, so we showed a little baseball spirit. :D

 

 

 

I also wanted to take a minute to feature Emily's photos.  She was able to put together a good portrait portfolio before they left Utah, and I especially love her black and white's!  If you know anyone in the Boston area who needs photos...

 

 

    

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Bluesy Blues

  As avid WLP blog-stalkers, I am sure many of you are aware that Thomas and I hold a deep and abiding love for jazz music and traditional jazz dance (e.g. "Lindy Hop", "Charleston", "Balboa", and "Blues", just to name a few).  In fact, we met dancing, and a big highlight from our recent anniversary trip to San Francisco was the dancing we were able to sneak in there.

 

So when it came time to do another workshop with my current trusty intern Abby, we headed over to the Bluesy Blues Practica, an excellent local blues dance that happens in Salt Lake County every first and third Wednesday in Sandy.  It's a great venue- they do a free lesson, some great dancers turn out for it, and they've got some fantastic blues playing the whole night.  It was the perfect setting for a lesson on flash photography, and specifically one that emulates the type of lighting situations you get at a lot of wedding receptions.  Because I was mostly teaching, not shooting, I didn't get many photos (though I am sure Abby will be posting some of hers soon), but there were a couple I wanted to share with y'all.

 

 

See what a difference lighting can make?  Two shots, taken in pretty much the same initial conditions, come out juuuuust a little different.

 

 

 

 

 

 

Grateful

  So often in the wedding business, we like to share the crazy stories.  And sometimes that's fun.  It is a crazy industry, after all.

 

Like the weekend we shot a wedding on Thursday, Friday and Saturday... and Saturday was in Portland.

 

Or The groom who broke his nose a week before the wedding.  Makeup can fix black eyes, right?

The nephew who got overheated on a summer day and vomited at the beginning of the reception.  He was much more comfortable and definitely in style after that!

The bride whose dress got stepped on after the ceremony and ripped.  Of course she still remained composed and confident!

 

...the couples who forget to bring the marriage license, the 103 degree weather at Salt Lake, the 9 degree weather in Logan, the wedding day that was 14 hours long without a break, the cake that fell over, etc.  It keeps life interesting, and these seem to be the stories we share.

 

 

But I've been thinking over the last week, and the reason I am a wedding photographer is not because of stories like these.  I am motivated to keep working hard because of the amazing people I get to work with.

 

First, my husband.  He takes care of most of the website, the contracts, and taxes.  He holds lights, lifts me up on his shoulders to get a better angle, and helps with those all-nighters before bridal fairs.  And he does all this as a second job.  He has another full time job as a financial representative, but still comes home to work with me in the evenings and weekends.  I couldn't do this without him.

   

 

Then, my mentors and teachers.  I've been blessed with the opportunity to shadow and learn from several photographers throughout the years, but 4 have had the greatest impact.

 

1. My dad.  A hobbyist, enthusiast, but appreciates photography, taught me business principles, and encouraged me as I started to work.  Bought me my first camera for my birthday, gave me my first camera upgrade as a wedding present.

 

2. Scott Jarvie.  He shot my wedding 3 years ago.  He's been a good example of creativity and one of the reasons I was pushed towards weddings, not other types of photography. (The photos above from my wedding are taken by him)

 

3. Andy Barfuss.  Not a photographer, but he taught an entrepreneurship class I took at BYU.  Not someone I spent lots of time with, but a few things he taught had a significant impact on me.  Among them are:

-The difference between marketing and advertising.  Marketing is building a brand, and is a long term and never-ending process.  Advertising is trying to find for clients/gigs immediately.  Both are important, but serve different purposes.

-"If you are willing to work like no one else will for the first five years of your business, you can live like no one else can for the rest of your life."

 

4. Kenneth Linge.  I took a couple classes with him on Photographing People and on learning the wedding business.  Much of his advice has proved invaluable to my business and to my skill.  He's extremely talented and creative, and he and his wife are wonderful people.  I will always be grateful for the lessons learned from them.

 

I'm grateful to the interns I've had.  Currently, it's Abby Alger holding the fort down.  She is an amazing assistant and does a great job with her own business also!

 

Lastly, I'm grateful to my clients.  I get to work with so many amazing couples.  They are good examples, and I enjoy weddings because there is an emotion, a relationship.  It's like a friend said on my Facebook wall "Your pictures make me believe in love again :)"  And it's true.  In a world filled with divorce and lack of commitment to each other, I feel so grateful to be here.  To see the honeymoon stage, to see vows and commitment, to see two people happy to be together.  Positive, supportive, and caring relationships.  That's what I've been thinking about.  I'm blessed in my career to spend it around happy people on an important day in their life as they promise to spend time and all eternity together.  And I feel lucky.

 

 

 

 

 

 

Facebook, here we come!

After much debate between keeping my personal page and "friending" people vs. having a fan page and asking people to "like" me, we finally gave in.  That's right, Whitney Lewis Photography can now be found on Facebook at:  

www.facebook.com/WhitneyLewisPhotography

 

So stroll over there to check it out, "like" the page, and if you check in regularly, you'll find wedding ideas and information on discounts and specials.

EXPELLIARMUS!

  To celebrate the final Harry Potter movie coming out today (it's amazing how many people I know went to the midnight showing), I decided it was time for these two photos to make another appearance on the blog.  I actually haven't seen the last installment of the movies yet; Thomas and I need to see 7.1 before going to see the final chapter.  We'll probably go see it next week. I know, I know- we should be in lovingly hand-made costumes amid the throngs of people seeing it NOW, but alas, I'm here in my office, blogging.

 

Brooklyn is a HUGE potter fan (I imagine she's watching HP 7 right now actually... probably in her wizard hat. She's awesome!), and given that we did their formals on July 3rd last year we took advantage of the window for legal firework goodness.

 

Happy Wizard Day, everyone!