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Nikon DSLR Cameras
D5100
wedding shoot
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<blockquote data-quote="jdeg" data-source="post: 40564" data-attributes="member: 1"><p>Yeah, the d90's are getting pretty cheap! </p><p></p><p>I really like that Joe brown video above. I think any other 'judge' wouldn't have recognized the details. </p><p></p><p>Anyway, this also reminds me of something that I noticed with the <a href="http://nikonites.com/blogs/jdeg/10-wedding-photography.html" target="_blank">wedding photographer we used</a>. During our wedding she had a D700 and a satchel with a couple more (expensive) lenses in it. A few times during the ceremony she quickly changed lenses. At the end of the ceremony we started to walk up the isle. She still had a telephoto lens on the camera and didn't have time to change to something with a shorter focal length. As a result she had to quickly back up. Since she knows what she's doing she still got the shot, but this is one of the main reasons I saw her with two d700's at our friends wedding less than a year later.</p><p></p><p>So the point is, it's not only important to have professional, fast gear for weddings, but sometimes necessary to have that + another + another photographer.</p><p></p><p>I am by no means a professional, but if I ever wanted to start doing wedding photography, I would assist someone else that is a professional before just diving in to get a feel for things.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="jdeg, post: 40564, member: 1"] Yeah, the d90's are getting pretty cheap! I really like that Joe brown video above. I think any other 'judge' wouldn't have recognized the details. Anyway, this also reminds me of something that I noticed with the [URL="http://nikonites.com/blogs/jdeg/10-wedding-photography.html"]wedding photographer we used[/URL]. During our wedding she had a D700 and a satchel with a couple more (expensive) lenses in it. A few times during the ceremony she quickly changed lenses. At the end of the ceremony we started to walk up the isle. She still had a telephoto lens on the camera and didn't have time to change to something with a shorter focal length. As a result she had to quickly back up. Since she knows what she's doing she still got the shot, but this is one of the main reasons I saw her with two d700's at our friends wedding less than a year later. So the point is, it's not only important to have professional, fast gear for weddings, but sometimes necessary to have that + another + another photographer. I am by no means a professional, but if I ever wanted to start doing wedding photography, I would assist someone else that is a professional before just diving in to get a feel for things. [/QUOTE]
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wedding shoot
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