Wedding

Houston Ceremony Location: Chapelwood United Methodist
Reception Location: Chapelwood United Methodist

Houston Ceremony Location: St. Pauls Methodist Church
Houston Reception Location: The Houstonian / The Manor House










What a fun wedding this was! The first ceremony was held outside and was abruptly shut down due to rain. Everyone quickly moved inside only to find that the facility had already set up seats for 150 people and a second ceremony started moments later.
If you are thinking of getting married, and you are in need of a Houston Wedding Facility, then you really need to talk to the team at The Courtyard on St. James. They really take care of their clients well.
This shot was immediately after the second service, and everyone wanted to get in on the action.

The St. Regis is one of the finest event locations in the city of Houston to hold either your wedding ceremony or reception. For information, contact Mr. Tobias Rimkus at 713-403-2625.
Sometimes, of camera flash isn’t even necessary . There are times when a can light is all you need. A can light, and clients that trust their photographer to place them in awkward positions. A wedding photographer starts to earn that trust the moment he or she answers the client’s first phone call to the studio.

I shot this a few weeks ago at The Hotel ZaZa. It was shot hand held, in very low light, but with light like that, who cares if there is a bit of motion blur. I love this image.

When I’m creating a portrait, and the subject has direct sunlight striking them, I will meter for the direct sunlight and allow the rest of the image to go a bit darker for effect.

I love this shot for so many reasons. Normally, a wedding photographer will photograph a bride and her father from behind when they are walking down the isle in order to get a great image of the train of the dress.
This shot is a bit of risk, as the image had to be captured just as the couple was betweeen the flag and the window. The father is walking just slightly ahead ofthe bride, allowing for both faces to be seen.
Everything comes together in this image, and it’s one of my favorites. Leave a comment and let me know what you think.

At most Indian weddings, the bride is carried into the ceremony in a carriage. There are hanging beeds on either side of the carriage to partially hide the bride. Just before she is carried down the isle, everyone puls the beads away so they can get an unobstructed view of the bride, so it’s a bit of a struggle to get this particular shot.
“I think the idealization of women is indigenous to men. There are various ways of idealizing women, especially sexually, based in almost every case on their inaccessibilty. When a woman functions as an unobtainable love object, then she takes on a mythical quality.”
Poet Laureate James Dickey, Self Interviews. P.153























































































































































































































































































































































































































































































































































































































































































































































































