© 2008 . All rights reserved.

Aspen

081011-0555-21.jpg

Aspen, Co

While in New Orleans hanging out with, undoubtedly, some of the coolest wedding photographers on the planet, I was chatting with Joe Photo about a personal art project to challenge myself and my skill at a wedding.  Joe asks if I have a wedding on the coming Saturday, I say no, and he says I have a wedding in Aspen – come and shoot it with me…   ummmm yeah…  (big thanks to my beautiful wife for allowing me to jet set a little).

Laine and Bill.

2nd shooting for the ultra hip Joe Photo in Aspen at a beautiful private estate with a gorgeous bride and groom….. what could get better?   It rained, which added that extra special feeling and mood.  Did you know that I absolutely love rainy day weddings?

081011-0168-21.jpg081011-0382-pano1.jpg081011-0217-21.jpg

So while 2nd shooting for Joe with one camera (my primary) I decided to split my shooting personality and attempt (at the same time) to try my project.  This project: “50 frames”  is an idea that has been sitting in my head for some time now,  the gist of it is to shoot a wedding while only clicking the shutter 50 times. To challenge myself to become an even more aware shooter and to see if I could represent a wedding story with only 50 clicks, keeping every frame, good or bad.   While shooting with my primary camera for Joe, I had my backup camera loaded with a very small CF, the preview LCD screen gaff taped up and the menu functions and delete buttons all inaccessible.  50 frames, no reviewing to see if I got the shot or not.  Almost like I was shooting film again.

Below is just one of the frames from that camera.  Though I think I did well with the project and it proves the fundamental concept in my head, I considered this a mild failure because I got distracted with such a beautiful wedding and I was just happy and excited to be 2nd shooting with Joe that I didn’t put a whole lot of attention toward the project.  In the end, I only shot 36 frames on the taped up camera (which, ironically is the amount of frames on a 35mm roll of film).  If you want to see all 36 frames from the project click here.

img_5462.jpg

One Big Thank You to Joe Photo,  for allowing me to tag along and shoot with one of the giants of our industry… thank you!

.jmc.

081012-0774-edit.jpg081012-0779-edit.jpg

5 Comments

  1. Posted 24 Oct ’08 at 10:22 am | Permalink

    WOW! Absolutely gorgeous. The first photo is incredibly striking. I got to see Joe’s stuff too – the bride is going to be thrilled with the coverage of her wedding!

  2. Posted 24 Oct ’08 at 9:08 pm | Permalink

    you are your hardest critic. that’s almost as hard as doing 1,000 push-ups non-stop. way to challenge yourself!

  3. Posted 29 Oct ’08 at 6:43 pm | Permalink

    these are absolutely spectacular! I love what you did with your lighting in the first shot. Totally amazing! Love them all!

  4. Posted 30 Oct ’08 at 5:32 am | Permalink

    I am still reeling from my project as a guest only allowed 50 frames! link. Thanks for the brilliant idea.

  5. Posted 30 Oct ’08 at 4:53 pm | Permalink

    these are off the charts of bad a$$…killer

Post a Comment

Your email is never published nor shared. Required fields are marked *

*
*

You may use these HTML tags and attributes: <a href="" title=""> <abbr title=""> <acronym title=""> <b> <blockquote cite=""> <cite> <code> <del datetime=""> <em> <i> <q cite=""> <strike> <strong>