Wedding Attire
Wedding Dresses
Wedding Dress Hire
Maternity Bridalwear
Wedding Cloaks
Wedding Hats
Wedding Shoes
Wedding Lingerie
Wedding Veils
Bridesmaids Gowns
Mens Formal
Mother of the Bride
Wedding Dress Boxes
Wedding Dress Cleaning

Wedding Beauty
Bridal Hair & Makeup
Bridal Mehndi

Wedding Jewellery
Accessories
Bridal Jewellery
Wedding Tiaras

Wedding Planning
Asian Weddings
Wedding Coordinators
Wedding Directories
Wedding Exhibitions
Celebrants
Speech Help
Blogs & Discussion Groups

Wedding Reception
Balloons & Confetti
Candles
Chair Covers
Favours
Flowers
Mobile Creches
Table Decoration

Wedding Food
Cakes
Cake Toppers
Catering
Chocolate Fountains
Wine & Champagne

Wedding Memories
Art (Wedding)
Bespoke Websites
Boudoir Portfolios
Guest Books
Photo Albums
Photographers
Videographers
Video Kiosk

Wedding Venues
Marquees
Venue Lighting
Wedding Venues
Weddings Abroad

Stationery/Gifts
Calligraphy
Gifts & Ideas
Invitations
Poems & Verses
Stationery

Wedding Transport
Car Hire & Limousines
Horse & Carriage

Wedding Entertainment
Bagpipers
Bouncy Castle Hire
Casino Hire
Ceilidh Musicians
Classical Musicians
Dance Lessons
Disco Hire
Dove Release
Entertainment
Entertainment Agencies
Fireworks Displays
Function Bands
Guitarists
Harpists
Jazz Bands
Living Statues
Mix & Mingle/Lookalikes
Pianists
Solo Singers
String Quartets
Table Magicians
Toastmasters
Vegas Showgirl Dancers
Violinists

And Don't Forget...

Hen & Stag Ideas
Honeymoons
Prom Gowns
Umbrella Hire
Wedding Insurance

Is Reportage Wedding Photography A Modern Trend?

Reportage Wedding Photography is still thought by many to be a modern trend. In fact it has a long heritage and was often called candid photography in the context of a wedding. Seen by extreme traditionalists (a rare breed now) as a new fad, it was felt to threaten the supremacy of the medium format camera with its staged shots and posed set ups.

In the old style, photographers always had a big camera set up on a tripod and even a hood over the head of the photographer. This very formal and very posed art of portraiture was born, like so many of today's cultural norms, of technological limitations. Way back when, photographic technology required long exposure times, long winded plate or film changes and "keep still" poses. Fast 35 mm film basically solved this problem, again with certain limitations. Lighter cameras holding rolls meant that photojournalistic techniques could be applied to wedding photography.

The game changer was that wedding photography needed no longer to be posed. Wedding Photography could now become Reportage Photography. Precious moments, unrepeatable in a pose are only possible with the participants being unaware that a camera is in use. Fast film offered this to a degree, although the fastest film was ISO 1600 or 3200 and was very grainy. In fact the grain produced by fast film (which enabled action freezing photojournalism in low-ish light) became a signature "look" found in Time magazine and other iconic journals.









Naturally, wedding photography started to borrow this look and start demanding the grainy black and white look. The grain is of course a form of visual artefact - a distortion of the truth in reality. Today's technology now takes this several steps further with the equivalent of ISO 102,000 available on some machines. A shot at ISO 6400 is now considered routine - affording incredible reportage wedding photography options to the photographer - with no grain in sight.

At times the modern, digital photographer is asked to add a simulation of celluloid film grain to otherwise pristine photograph. Although it can look great, it is an intriguing fact of aesthetics that a photograph can seem more timeless and real with artefacts added to it.

Part of the maturation of reportage wedding photography has to be the evolution of the Wedding Album. Rather than present the married couple with a simple book with best pictures placed in order of preference, the wedding photographer's task now includes the design and layout of a book that well tell the story of the wedding. Photographs are placed in a digitally printed book, in chronological order. Each photo relates to each other photo as part of a linear story, bringing vividly back the memories of the big day.

David shares his knowledge about photography. Visit David Jones Photography for more information and tips from a London wedding photographer.


Author Credentials:
David Jones - London Wedding photographer.
Email: info@davidjonesphotography.com
www.davidjonesphotography.com
© 2005 - 2012 UKWeddingStore.co.uk                               Web Design   Privacy Policy        Contact         Cheap Wedding Dresses

Custom Search