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Photo Evaluation
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My First Wedding Shoot (Link to Album)
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<blockquote data-quote="Marcel" data-source="post: 115092" data-attributes="member: 3903"><p>If this was your first wedding, I think you did a fine job. Your pictures and posing should improve with practice. After a few hundred, you usually get the best of these. What makes it difficult is the settings. Some places just are not very photogenic. You then have to try to get more head and shoulders type of shots and forget the full length ones. But you do need to have a few at least.</p><p></p><p>As for lens choice, if you're planning to get a full frame one day, then I'd say the 24-70 would be a good choice. But you probably would need a 10-20 as well to cover you in tight rooms for group shots. If money is tight, I'd get a 35 1.8 in the meantime and a cheap (read not expensive) second hand 18-55. You do need the wider angle view quite often with wedding shots in my opinion.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="Marcel, post: 115092, member: 3903"] If this was your first wedding, I think you did a fine job. Your pictures and posing should improve with practice. After a few hundred, you usually get the best of these. What makes it difficult is the settings. Some places just are not very photogenic. You then have to try to get more head and shoulders type of shots and forget the full length ones. But you do need to have a few at least. As for lens choice, if you're planning to get a full frame one day, then I'd say the 24-70 would be a good choice. But you probably would need a 10-20 as well to cover you in tight rooms for group shots. If money is tight, I'd get a 35 1.8 in the meantime and a cheap (read not expensive) second hand 18-55. You do need the wider angle view quite often with wedding shots in my opinion. [/QUOTE]
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My First Wedding Shoot (Link to Album)
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