Wednesday, July 30, 2008

Engagement Session at Middle Harbor Shoreline Park

You know it's a good match when you're grinning while editing engagement pictures and then you receive an email like this from the couple:

Hi Lindsay,
I just wanted to say what a great time Adam and I had taking our engagement photos. I don't think he was super excited about it before, but he really enjoyed himself - how many of your clients throw gang signs, and run headlong into Canadian geese? :) He told everyone about your "Dude, your game sucks" line. It may have been cold, windy and cloudy, but it was fun!

We can't wait to see the pictures!
Thanks again,
Stephanie

That basically sums up my engagement session with Stephanie and Adam from this past weekend. It was a lot of fun and more importantly, I just really, really like them. Adam's in a band and Stephanie's no girlie girl and they're both just down to earth. Their wedding is in Gilroy in October and I really can't wait!

Here are some shots from our blustery session at Middle Harbor Shoreline Park in Oakland. Check them out!




True thugs. Fo real.


As for the reference's to Adam's game, here's a before and after. His game was obviously lacking. How are you going to pick up a shorty like that? He just needed a little encouragement.



Just an awesome, awesome couple.


See you soon!
Love one another and you will be happy. It's as simple and as difficult as that. ~Michael Leunig

Tuesday, July 29, 2008

Brittany + Brian: Wedding in San Francisco with Julie Cheshire

Brittany and Brian celebrated their wedding the other week with some great touches that really made the day personal. I shot the wedding with Julie of Julie Cheshire Photography.

We started the day at the Fairmont in San Francisco where Brittany was putting on the finishing touches to her ensemble. Brian had given her some beautiful diamond earrings earlier in the week that matched her engagement ring. The wedding bands were engraved with the wedding date and his had the inscription, "Forever my sweet thing". How cute is that?


The ceremony was incredibly personal with only 30 people in attendance in one of the larger suites at the Fairmont. They had a harpist who played beautifully throughout the service. One of my favorite parts was passing of the rings around to every person in the room for personal blessings to the couple.




In the gap between the ceremony and the larger reception, we all (Brittany, Brian, 30 guests, and Julie and myself) piled onto to a trolley car to take us around San Francisco for various photo ops. We had a blast on the trolley car and the only casualty was a Blackberry that went overboard – the battery was never recovered.


We first stopped at Fort Point for some appropriately foggy shots of the San Francisco Golden Gate Bridge.


We then travelled to Alamo Square for some pictures in front of the famed Painted Ladies and then on to the Embarcadero to give some attention to the Bay Bridge and Ferry building. I think we were all thankful to be out in the sun there as it was VERY chilly on the trolley car during the rest of the trip.


The reception was held at the beautiful Olympic Club. Before they became utterly exhausted with pictures, we were able to capture some shots of Brittany and Brian by the swimming pool that was surrounded by fantastic and ornate stained glass windows and ceiling.


Again, with the sweet little touches: Brittany had made guest cards that directed the guests to tables dedicated to special couples in their lives. They had gotten wedding pictures from each of these couples and used them on the place cards and as part of the centerpieces. It was such a unique and personal idea. They had also put out little bells at each setting for the guests to ring and signify a kiss.


After dinner, the couple danced to Frank Sinatra's "The Summer Wind" and handed the party over to the awesome band, The Cheeseballs. I hadn't heard such a fantastic band in a while. The eight member ensemble got the place rocking with some disco, hip hop, and a few classics mixed in.


We finished off the night with the (cup)cake cutting. The adorable cupcakes were specially monogrammed with a "b & b" with sweet little dots.


It was an excellent wedding. I'm so glad I was able to share it with Brittany and Brian. Thanks, guys!


All summer long
we sang a song
And then we strolled that golden sand
Two sweethearts and the summer wind
Frank Sinatra, "The Summer Wind"

An Engagement Session Teaser!

Yesterday I had an engagement session with a truly awesome couple. I haven't gone through all their pics yet, but here's a teaser to show you a glimpse of how awesome Stephanie & Adam really are...

I am just itching to shoot their wedding in October. I can't wait!

I'll have more up soon!

Monday, July 21, 2008

[what to wear] engagement sessions

I love shooting engagement sessions and include them in all of my Philly area weddings so that the couple and I can really get to know each other. (See this for more reasons.) The inevitable question before a portrait session: what do I wear? There are no hard and fast rules, but there are some suggestions that you may want to consider before your big day in front of the camera. Here are a few…

• I absolutely encourage outfit changes. So consider wearing something dressy and bringing along something more casual/everyday.
Janene and Greg rocked my world when they contrasted upscale with the crumbling walls of Eastern State Penitentiary.
Philadelphia engagement photography session Eastern State Penitentiary
And then changed into something more casual.
Philadelphia engagement photography session Art Museum

• Beware words, logos, loud colors and patterns that might distract from the truly important aspect of the pictures: you! The human eye will locate familiar words in pictures and put them together, taking away from the true subject.
• Coordinate your outfits, but don't wear the exact same thing. Stick to complementary tones and bear in mind that darker colors are most slimming on women.
• Think about wearing an outfit that matches your surroundings. Floppy summer hat for a beach session: yes. Floppy summer hat for a snowy session on the ski slopes: maybe not.
Cole broke out the blazer for some preppy shots at Grace Cathedral and the Fairmont.

Alyssa and Kyle went with boat shoes, navy, and white for pictures around the marina.
Engagement photography in Havre de Grace Maryland

• Give your shoes as much attention as your shirt. They will be in the pictures and may even be highlighted in a few. Heels are great with jeans, pants, or skirts, if you’re comfortable in them. They make the legs look longer.

• Wear something that you feel defines your personal style.

• Wear something you can sit, walk, run, lay down, jump, kick, and spin in.


• Check the weather and dress appropriately. No matter how cute you look in that flirty tank top, you'll be completely miserable when you wear it in thick fog. Wool sweaters and wellies can be just as awesome. When in doubt: LAYERS!



• Bring props, especially if they have some kind of special meaning to you.
Lisa and Jeff did the long distance relationship thing for a while.  A vintage suitcase in Union Station in Washington DC was absolutely perfect!
Washington DC engagement photography session
• Accessorize with your favorite jewelry, scarves, hats, belts, shoes, and even pets (well-behaved, of course).

Tips:
• Unless you want it in the pics, don't bring a purse; you'll just be putting it down every few seconds.
• If you're particularly concerned about something, mention it to me so that I can keep an extra sharp eye out for it. (examples: that cowlick you've had since you were 5, the necklace that is constantly flipping around, more cleavage than grandma would appreciate, etc.)
• If you want to see what others have done, check out some of my other engagement sessions for what you like.

In the end, be true to yourself. If you are not comfortable, it will be obvious in your pictures. If these suggestions don't feel like you, break all the rules and show up in something that is completely, and totally you.


“The only rule is don't be boring and dress cute wherever you go. Life is too short to blend in.” - Paris Hilton


Helpful source: Miss Avocado on Weddingbee

Friday, July 18, 2008

New Website!

Fabulous, exciting, stupendous news!!! My website overhaul is complete! Yay!

I have been working on it for months now and I'm happy to say that it's finally out there. Same basic colors and feel, but a smoother interface with more images. Plus, there's now a weddings section that I will be filling soon.

I'm so psyched about it. I've kept it under wraps for a while now since I didn't know when it would go live. I just love the new site.




Woohoo!

Go check out www.lindsaydocherty.com right now and let me know what you think!

Wedding in Carmel with Julie Cheshire

The other week I shot a wedding with the lovely Julie of Julie Cheshire Photography down in Carmel at Mission Ranch. As you will see, Mission Ranch is just beautiful.

Loren got ready in the honeymoon cottage. It was an adorable little house just large enough for all of the girls to get gussied up. Loren is simply beautiful and I love, love, love her hairstyle.



The flower girl was cute as a button. That face in the lower left was when she saw Loren’s dress for the first time. She looked like a little princess herself.


The ceremony site was down a path and over a bridge with a spectacular and private view of a field and the bay in the distance. If it hadn’t been so warm and lovely, it really would have reminded me of Scotland. And there were even sheep out there! They started getting vocal during the formals before the ceremony. I just thought it was the coolest thing.



Loren and Michael had blue skies and huge puffy clouds just for them.


The ceremony was presided over by a family friend which made it all the more special and personal. The six bridesmaids carried white roses and green hydrangea; Loren’s bouquet consisted of green orchids and white roses.


Since we had taken care of most of the formals before the ceremony, we pulled Loren and Michael aside for just a few shots near the fence before heading off to their cocktail hour.


The details were perfect and everything seemed to fit so well. It was a beautiful wedding in the country with just the right amount of fancy details and relaxed atmosphere.


The couple danced their first song to Alison Krauss’ “When You Say Nothing At All”.


The party really got going after that. There was some great music and the guests were so much fun.


Thanks so much, Loren & Michael. All the best!


The smile on your face lets me know that you need me
There's a truth in your eyes sayin' you'll never leave me
The touch of your hand says you'll catch me ever I fall
You say it best when you say nothing at all
Alison Krauss, When You Say Nothing At All

Sunday, July 6, 2008

Being a good wedding guest

Despite having never been a bride myself, I have a pretty good grasp on weddings. I read more wedding blogs than I care to admit and I have been a guest and/or photographer at quite a few as well.

Today I read a great blog post over at Manolo For the Brides on Six Steps to Being the Perfect Wedding Guest.

It's a really good article and one that I believe many brides would love to be able to pass on to their guests. Check it out and let me know what you think. What else would you add?

So you opened your mail one day recently and found a shimmery pale pink envelope (or a lush, chocolate one, or an austerly elegant ivory-colored one, or one you could barely read through the bright purple printing on cherry red paper) containing a wedding invitation. Perhaps it was one you’d been expecting for weeks. Perhaps it was one you had no clue was coming. Perhaps you are so close to the couple you took part in the invitation addressing party. Perhaps you have to desperately scan your every childhood memory to even figure out who the happy couple might be and why they sent you an invitation to witness their marriage.

Whatever the case, there are things you can do to make sure that you’re the sort of guest people want to invite to other events after this one is over and done with.

1: Please, please, please RSVP! This is probably the number one faux pas wedding guests make today. The bride and groom need to know how many people are coming. The answer will affect everything from favors to the seating arrangements to the catering bill. Look! They’ve even made it easy for you to do! Simply either check the yes or the no option on the reply card and send it back in the pre-addressed, postage paid envelope, or call the phone number at the bottom of the invitation and tell whoever answers whether or not you’re coming. Many couples even include an online option at their wedding websites for easy response.

Oh, and when you reply, only do so for the people who were actually listed on the invitation. If your name is the only one on the envelope and there is no ‘and guest’ on it, then do not attempt to reply for yourself, a date, your three-year-old child and your next-door neighbor. The bride and groom have spent a lot of time organizing their guest list. There may be any number of reasons why these people were not invited. If you do not feel you can go without your mother, your child, or a date, then the proper thing to do is to decline the invitation and send your best wishes for the couple’s marriage along with them. Don’t try to guilt the bride and groom into inviting your guests to their wedding.

On the other hand, the mere receipt of an invitation does not mean you have to say yes for everyone listed. If you’d rather leave your small child behind with a babysitter than watch to make sure she doesn’t take a header into the wedding cake before it’s cut, you’re perfectly free to do so.

Don’t feel the need to make excuses or stand on soapboxes. Just say, ‘I’m terribly sorry, but little Agatha-Petunia (or Joe Bob, or Auntie Mildred) won’t be able to attend with me.’

2: If at all possible, send your wedding gift before the wedding. Bringing gifts to the wedding itself can be awkward. You have to juggle it along with everything else, there may or may not be a designated place for it to go during the festivities, and that place may or may not be adequately guarded against theft. It’s an ugly fact of life that some people do crash large weddings in public places and help themselves to goodies off the gift table while nobody’s looking. It really is easier for everyone concerned if you send the gift to the address the invitation was issued from at least a couple weeks before the big event.

3: Remember that the registry list is a helpful suggestion, not an order. By all means, take a look at the registry list if you can. It’s a great way to get hints as to what the happy couple may or may not need and to get a general idea of their tastes if you are not entirely familiar with them. It’s also a great way to give something you know for certain they can use and will enjoy…but you are not in any way required to use it. Feel free to use your imagination as well. Some brides may disagree, but some of the best wedding gifts Mr. Twistie and I got were the sorts of things you just can’t register for. Whether you choose to give a place-setting of the couple’s formal china, a set of guest towels, a spa day for two, some of your homemade persimmon jelly, a check, or simply a congratulatory note, send it with love and without worry. It’s perfectly polite and appropriate.

4: Arrive in good time looking like you belong. Yes, I know, most weddings run late, but that is no reason for you to deliberately do the same. Do your best to arrive on site at least ten minutes before the ceremony is scheduled to begin, but no more than half an hour in advance. You want to have plenty of time to be seated and arrange yourself comfortably, but you don’t want to show up while the altar flowers are being arranged or the pew decorations are being hung or while a frantic bridesmaid in curlers and a robe is trying to figure out where the bride’s eyeshadow got to. Worse yet, you don’t want to enter the room just as the officient is asking whether there is anyone who objects to the union!

And you never know. Every once in a blue moon, a wedding does actually begin on time.

Looking like you belong is a trickier issue. It means taking stock of a variety of clues (time of day, location of the ceremony, whether the reception is in a different place and what that place might be, formality of the invitation, etc.) and working out what seems best for that time and place. For instance, if the wedding is in a fairly conservative house of worship, it would be politic to keep knees and shoulders covered at bare minimum. If the wedding is held during the day, don’t go for a sequinned evening gown, even if the reception will run until everyone is simply out of steam. An outdoor daytime wedding is the perfect excuse for a great hat, but that might look out of place in a banquet hall during the evening. If you’re invited to Pamela Anderson’s next wedding, I’d advise dressing down, since there’s a good chance the bride will appear in a bikini again.

Whatever you wear, though, make sure it’s clean, neat, and at least a reasonable attempt to fit the time of day, setting, and level of formality. Oh, and never turn down a wedding invitation simply because you don’t have the money to buy a special outfit. Simply do the best you can within your available means. If they really want the honor of your presence rather than the honor of your presents, the happy couple will not care much about what you’re wearing so long as you show up.

5: Get into the spirit of the party. I can’t believe the number of people I have heard over the years insist that they couldn’t have fun at a wedding without alcohol, a date, the precise music they like best…and all sorts of things that really shouldn’t make that big a difference. If you go in with that attitude, I guarantee you won’t have fun. What’s more, I’ll tell you right up front it’s your own damn fault. I’ve been to dozens of weddings in my day, and there have only been a couple where I had a grizzly time. Whether or not there was something ‘adult’ to drink, whether or not I had a date, whether or not I was wild about the music, whether or not there was dancing, whether or not I was familiar with the customs being observed, even whether or not I knew many people there, I managed to have a great time nearly every time. The ones where I had a bad time…well, there were good reasons why I had a bad time, but at least I know I went in game to enjoy myself.

If you go in expecting to have a good time, that’s pretty much half the battle. So try out a food you’re not familiar with. Introduce yourself to someone you don’t know. Ask someone the significance of a tradition you’re unfamiliar with. Just remember, if you walk in defensive and negative…you will almost certainly leave the same way having dampened someone else’s good spirits into the bargain. Don’t rain on the bride and groom’s parade.

6: Thank your hosts. At some point during the reception, be sure to give the happy couple your best wishes and thank them for the invitation. It’s easy to do this if there is a receiving line, but if the bride and groom don’t have one, take it upon yourself to do it anyway. Ideally, they should come to you at some point, but it’s perfectly polite to be the one to initiate the conversation if they don’t. If you don’t manage to make contact with them during the reception, be sure to find a way to let them know later on what a great time you had and what a beautiful wedding it was. At absolute minimum, let them know you appreciate being included in their big day.

A wedding is a celebration of a happy event. It’s a great excuse for a party. And unless everyone involved is doing it completely wrong, it’s not a minefield. So just remember these simple rules, relax, and have a great time knowing you’re doing your best to add to the day.