Don’t forget the print special below closes this Wednesday, your best chance to save around 25% off your purchase of wedding and landscape prints.
Posts Tagged ‘eastern suburbs’
Hurry! Print Special Closes Soon
July 26, 2010Red Hot Print Specials. Limited Time
July 18, 2010My print lab is having a sale, so that means I can pass on the savings to you! If you have wondering to get Nan for her birthday, been pondering if you wanted to order that canvas of your favourite wedding photo or you want to give a unique art print to a loved one, now is you chance.
Kodak Endura Metallic Prints in a traditional Black Gallery Frame with a digital paper coloured matt. 20×30″ Frame size only. Normally $220, now $150 with Free Delivery
16×20″ Kodak Endura Metallic Print on 10mm black craftwood with hand made aluminium ‘U’ channel hanger. Normally $250, Now $180 with Free Delivery
16×20″ Premium Canvas (white edge only, not pictured), Normally $350, Now $260 or 20×30″ Premium Canvas, Normally $600, Now $400 with Free Delivery
How do you order? Just simply send me an email to marcel@mvphotography.com.au and tell me the product you are after out of the list above, along with the image number or description/title (in the case of a landscape prints). Make immediate payment to PayPal using my email address or request my account details for direct deposit. Don’t forget to mention your daytime AND evening delivery addresses. Your orders must be in by midnight Wednesday 28th of July to take advantage of the special prices. happy ordering.
MV Photography July Catch Up
July 10, 2010Hi everyone, it has been a while since my last post, so I thought I tell you all what’s been going on.
- The new pricing guide has received much praise from new clients and friends. It details everything you need to know about MV Photography and the range of beautiful printed products available.
- February and March next year is starting to look like a busy period for me, so if there are any couples looking to get married around this period it is best to give me a call soon to book your spot.
- Being the wintery non wedding season it has been time to sort out all the paperwork and business materials, so coming over the next few months will be a Photo Book sample, a beautiful new brochure and new business cards.
- I am still taking registrations of interest for basic Digital SLR training, so if anyone is interested please shoot me an email as the more people I can get the faster the training will come and the cheaper it will be for everyone.
- I’m in discussions with some wedding photographer contacts to present some training at a business level (namely Photoshop and Adobe Lightroom) skills) to be held at a studio in Malvern, so that should be interesting.
- I myself will be taking in a few seminars and workshops when I can as they come thick and fast in winter.
- I have registered for the 2010 Annual Photo Walk being held in St Kilda on Saturday 24th of July. It’s always fun to catch up with other photography enthusiasts and just take pictures of stuff we would normally pass by. Head over to Scott Kelby’s blog for information if you want to join me.
- My Lowepro CompuTrekka Plus AW photo backpack is for sale as I don’t really use it that much (it looks as good as new) and I’m going to invest in a big road case to carry all my gear to wedding photography jobs. Please email me or call me for details and a price (full review and pictures coming soon).
- Below is an image I retouched to show a potential client if I could do a particular style that she saw on the internet, so I was happy to demonstrate this to her. Soon there will be a full blog post on the step by step on what I did to achieve this look in the photo.
From the Archives, Grand Central Terminal, New York
May 29, 2010This one is from an image folder I haven’t opened in a while, but I wanted to post this picture as this stood out as an amazing place in New York city. Grand Central Terminal was opened in October 1871 at a cost of $6.4million dollars by ‘Commodore’ Cornelius Vanderbilt. The terminal was restored over the years from 1996 to 1998 to what you see there today including the majestic sky ceiling. I particularly wanted to show this grand interior by tilting my camera up and using an ultra-wide lens to capture as much as possible. I processed the image with Topaz Labs Adjust to get the HDR (High Dynamic Range) look and to bring out the details of the stone work.
Photo Critique 1 Wedding Formal Portrait
May 16, 2010As promised it is the first post of a series of photo critiques of my own photographs that I have taken at weddings or even just out and about. I aim to get the photography enthusiast side of my readership (or even potential wedding clients) some little insight in what is the photographic process from vision to print. As a photographer I analyse images all the time, where ever I see them, magazines, the Internet, television or ads at bus stops. I look at each photo and try to deconstruct it, the lighting, the equipment and anything else that makes the image, doing this makes me a better photographer and it adds to my own vision.
You will here me harp on about vision all the time, it is the foundation for photography. Most people think it is a matter of point and shoot and better the camera, the better the picture, but before I even raise the camera to my eye I will have some sense of what I’m going to take a picture of and what the final print will look like. I even consider what post image processing I will need to do to bring that photo to match my initial vision.
Here is the first photograph I will look at, it is of good friends of mine Nicole and Tim Holmes, who’s wedding I shot in January this year, this photo is one of my favourite from the day.
I’ll first start with the equipment as that is the most asked question from keen photographers, but the least important. I used a my Canon 400D DSLR (something you can pick up used for under $500) with a vertical battery grip and a Tamron 17-50mm f2.8 zoom lens. This choice of focal length (in this case 17mm on the lens, which is 28mm on the old film scale) was chosen simply due to the distance I was from the subject. I was pushed right up into spider infested grape vines to get the framing I wanted. Most photographers hate the main focus of the subjects to be in the centre of frame, here i was being deliberate. If I tilted the camera down more I would have resulted in an unusual distortion causing the heads to look too big and the bodies taper off to really skinny which is not true to reality and isn’t flattering. If I tried to bend my knees more and get lower I would have been taking the photo from an unflattering position for the bride, but the main reason was to capture that lens flare which I find pleasing. In the past you were always told not to shoot towards the sun or any bright lights in the fear you would get lens flare. I also wanted to have the greenery as a frame for the couple as this gives isolation to the subject and they stand out more.
The image appears relatively natural and I simply captured a fleeting moment, but this was very posed from the start. The groom is quite tall, so he is standing behind the bride on the lower part of the slope (the vineyard was on a slight hill). I had the bride shove in close and connect their bodies for a sense of intimacy and I told them to look at each other. Simply telling them to do this, they must of remembered the reasons they were there that day and both of them broke out in a natural smile. Forced smiles never look the same in a photograph, so I consider this as something that I won’t do at a wedding. The flowers were brought up into frame simply for something for the bride to hold and to add an extra point of interest. I utilised this location in many different ways to result in several pictures to used in the wedding album. This is so I can capture a great range of images if the location is fantastic as well as if any other locations are not great with poor light I have safety images to fall back on.
Metering in this lighting condition is usually quite difficult but I was aware of the problems the camera might face when it came to metering the scene. Due to the massive contrasts between shadows and highlights the camera would go for something in-between, but to make sure my mid tone areas exposed properly I used the centre-weighted (or a.k.a Spot Metering) metering mode and metered off the grooms face. My camera was set to manual mode and already set fairly close to the setting I wanted as I had taken already a few shots prior to this one. While the couple got into position after directing them I took a quick snap shot to make sure the exposure was right. I then quickly reviewed to see what my camera’s histogram was showing to me and then I composed the shot properly. The aperture used was f5.6 which is the sharpest aperture of my lens and I wasn’t too concerned what the depth of field (or depth of focus) was. I simply wanted a sharp image of the couple from top to bottom. The shutter speed I selected was 1/50th of a second which was the minimum I would go to avoid camera shake. Finally the ISO setting, which is the last I usually set was ISO100, so I would get a nice, clean and noise free image. You camera is always going to produce the best files at this setting.
No flash or reflectors were used so the image is totally natural light. Lastly there is the post processing. I keep my processing fairly guarded as this is my own recipe that makes my style, but I will say the white balance is quite warm, there is slight colour toning introduced and there is a vignette applied to darken the edges to make sure the focus of the viewer is on the faces. The images besides the toning is totally straight out of camera and all that was needed to retouch was a few bits of dried flower petals on the suit from earlier in the day and a very low amount of skin smoothing in Adobe Lightroom.
If I was to take it again, I would compose more to the right to get rid of the space to the left, I would try to introduce some space between Nicole’s arm and her body and maybe see if Tim could bend his knees a bit more because he’s as tall as me! There you have it, feel free to comment and ask any questions.
May Catch Up with MV Photography
May 12, 2010- Thanks to all that contributed registrations of interest with MV Photography for Digital SLR training. I am still taking ideas and feedback, so read the post below for further details.
- I am still choosing a quality photobook supplier for my range of wedding photography albums. There of course is an extensive range, but I’m choosing carefully to ensure quality and great value.
- New business cards and brochures are in development at the moment, so stay tuned.
- More of favourite images from the archives will be posted in the coming weeks including some that have never seen the light of day from my trip to the United States in 2008 and some more wedding photos.
- To give you all a taste of some photography training I am posting some of my own images with critiques attached. This is to show some of the thought processes when I’m behind the camera, the metering and focusing modes I used, the use of aperture and shutter speed as well as elaborate on my vision for the photograph from capture to print.
- In the coming months I will be running a quick and easy competition to any followers out there. Stay tuned for the details, but you can win a mounted, limited first edition landscape print from MV Photography.
What Websites I Visit
May 2, 2010Hi all, on my old blog I had a list of websites I always visited on a regular basis, which I never really updated. So every now and then I will post links to interesting websites, whether they are wedding related, photography in general, Photoshop related or of any inspirational photographers I follow. I’ll start with the ones below.
http://www.wpja.com/ A site i visit every now and then to juice up on images before I go shoot a wedding. It has great examples of award winning photojournalistic images all shot at weddings.
http://www.dpreview.com/ Where the nerd in me goes to get some user feedback on products, find out the latest gossip on gear not yet released and for some general time wasting.
http://www.canonrumors.com/ All the latest up to the minute Canon rumours are found here.
http://www.scottkelby.com/ The man that is the authority on all things Photoshop.
That will will do for now, but more will come in the near future.
The most amazing Wedding Video
May 2, 2010I have always been fascinated with video shot on Canon’s latest video/still camera hybrids the 5D MkII and the new 7D, because they have a true cinematic look and a smoothness not present in HD DV cameras due to their limited sensor sizes. I always keep up to date with what is happening in this world of video and I stumbled across this video by Pacific Pictures. It goes for 29minutes and was shot in India, centred around a wedding that actually occurred. The video was shot in a true cinematic style with obviously a fairly large budget and professional movie rigging. The video is truly amazing and is worth the long download time as it was shot in true HD. Watch it here.
Bianca & Travis’s Wedding, Inglewood Estate
April 21, 2010Tag along with Global Ballooning Melbourne
April 20, 2010Belinda and her friend Ebony had a dawn balloon flight with Global Ballooning on the weekend. Unfortunately I didn’t get to go in one, but I hitched a ride with one of the chase vans. Its quite an amazing sight when these balloons are inflated and we were blessed with a magnificent sunrise and clear, low wind day, allowing the flight to go ahead. After the balloons were sent up into the air it was a matter of trying to beat them to their landing spot, which you really don’t know until they are nearly there. Obviously there is no way to steer them and you have a maximum of 2.5 hours flight time until the gas runs out. I also learnt lots of interesting facts along the way about ballooning and also had been deceived by how fast they move when they come into land. A big thanks to the Global Ballooning crew as they were a delight to hang around with that morning and the experience comes highly recommended. For bookings go to http://www.globalballooning.com.au/



























