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Chicago and Chicago suburb weddings we recently photographed.
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Locations We Have Photographed |
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have photographed weddings in Chicago and the Chicago
suburbs including the following towns and cities: Addison,
Alsip, Arlington
Heights, Aurora,
Barrington,
Bartlett,
Bensenville,
Bloomingdale,
Bolingbrook,
Bridgeview,
Burr Ridge, Chicago,
Darien,
DeKalb,
Des Plaines, Downers
Grove, Dyer IN, East Dundee, Elburn, Elgin,
Elk
Grove Village, Elmhurst,
Elmwood Park, Farmer City, Frankfort,
Geneva, Glen
Ellyn, Glendale Heights, Glenview,
Hammond Indiana, Hickory Hills, Hinsdale,
Hoffman Estates, and Homer Glen, Illinois, Ingleside,
Itasca, Joliet,
Lake Forest,
Lemont,
LeRoy, Libertyville, Lisle,
Lockport,
Lombard Illinois, Long
Grove, Manteno, Medinah, Midlothian, Mokena,
Montgomery, Morton Grove, and Mundelein, Illinois, Naperville,
New Lenox,
Niles, Norridge, Northlake, Oak Forest, Oak
Park, Oakbrook,
Orland
Park, Palatine, Palos
Hills, Pekin, Plainfield,
River Grove, Riverside, Rockford, Rosemont,
Schaumburg,
Schiller Park, South Holland, St.
Charles, Streamwood, Sycamore, Illinois, Tinley
Park, Villa
Park, Wadsworth, Warrenville,
West
Chicago, West Dundee, Wheaton,
Willow
Springs, Willowbrook,
Wilmette, Wilmington, Winnetka,
Woodridge, Worth,
Illinois. |
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| Creative
Wedding Photography Overview
An
article from weddingphotographydirectory.com
Also
known as artistic wedding photography, this photography
approach allows the photographer to improvise and use his/her
artistic sense to tell the story of your wedding day. Creative
wedding photography is known for really unique and unusual
lighting effects and angles that make the result really
stand out from the ordinary. When study at an creative style
imagery, one often wonders if he is looking at a photograph
or a piece of art. The abstract feel of some of artistic
photographs puts them in the class of imagery one may see
at an art gallery. Often, when looking at creative photographs
one may notice more and more details they have not noticed
when first glancing at the photo. While some artistic photos
need to be posed, others occur naturally. This happens quite
seldom, but when it does it produces simply amazing images.
Think of a photograph where the bride and groom's reflection
is glitters on the surface of the lake or an image where
the newly weds are engaged in their first dance and their
shadows on the marble floor seem to be dancing to a melody
of their own. A good artistic photographer will not only
use the mood of the wedding, but the very environment the
ceremony is in. Shadows, lighting and even focus is manipulated
to achieve the desired effect. Often artistic photographers
will employ the use of black and white images to make the
pictures look even more distinctive. This brings out some
dramatic lighting and shadow effects that make the wedding
day look mysterious and really special.
THE
EVOLUTION OF WEDDING PHOTOGRAPHY
Article by: Wedding
Photojournalist Association
Five generations of Americans have revisited special moments
in their lives by looking through photographs, most especially
of their wedding day. But early to mid-20th-century brides
and grooms have only memories of their weddings because
their photographers simply weren't there.
Early cameras were large and bulky and portable lighting
equipment non-existent, tethering photographers -- and bridal
portraits -- to studios. All that changed by World War II
when the 35mm camera, roll film and on-camera flash hit
the scene, transforming first war photography, then photojournalism
and eventually wedding photography. After the war, military-trained
photographers and amateurs trolled wedding parties snapping
candid photos they'd sell to delighted bridal couples. That
flushed wedding photographers out of the studio and onto
the wedding day scene. But still, wedding pictures were
posed and moments like cake slicing carefully staged.
Leafing
through glossy magazines in 1940s and '50s, young couples
and photographers began to see something new: candid, intimate
photographs of celebrity and royal weddings taken by photojournalists.
Sure, there were formal poses, but many photos captured
the moment, for better or worse. Like the 1943 Life magazine
photograph of 54-year-old, serious-faced Charlie Chaplin
fumbling with the wedding ring as he tried to place it on
the finger of his 18-year-old fourth wife, Oona O'Neill
-- an endearing moment frozen in time.
In 1956 Americans were treated to photographs of a happy-yet-tentative
Marilyn Monroe laughing while feeding cake to her husband,
playwright Arthur Miller, on their wedding day. Also that
year magazines worldwide gave the royal treatment to the
grand wedding of actress Grace Kelly to Prince Rainier of
Monaco, devoting full-page spreads to candid moments, such
as a pensive Princess Grace gazing over a balcony before
the ceremony and the couple exchanging rings.
It
was bound to happen. Invite photojournalists to a wedding
and they'll do what they do best: get the story through
the most candid, often humorous, touching photo record imaginable.
Artful images of unfettered moments have universal appeal,
and these early photographs helped spark a new genre of
wedding photography. Decades later this documentary approach
has evolved to what it is now: a popular option in wedding
photography that captures the story behind the ceremony.
Today it's available to everyone, not just celebrities,
and photographers don't have to be journalists to capture
the look.
Mindy Myers, a Des Moines, Iowa, USA, photographer and member
of the Wedding Photojournalist Association (WPJA), has earned
a degree in journalism, but primarily photographs weddings
and family portraits. She got into wedding photography when
she went to friends' weddings armed with a bridesmaid dress
and camera. "I could see that the photographers weren't
getting the real moments of the day," she explains.
"One of the first pictures I ever took was when a couple
was at the altar and sitting in the pew behind them was
a frail, old grandfather watching," she says. She turned
her camera away from the couple and photographed him because
in his face was the look of familial happiness, an important
part of the story.
For
those wedding photographers who are photojournalists, their
journalism background often informs choices they make when
shooting weddings. WPJA member George Martell of Boston,
MA, USA says working as a staff photographer for the Boston
Herald for 17 years (he now shoots weddings full time),
taught him how to sense when something is about to happen.
"Years of experience help me know when a moment is
coming. I never go for clichés, only the moments
in between."
Capturing ordinary moments on one of the most transforming
days in people's lives is what wedding photography is about
for wedding photographer Huy Nguyen of Dallas, TX, USA,
a former staff photographer with The Dallas Morning News.
His photojournalism background taught him to create images
that transcend the specific to become universal, so that
anyone looking at his powerful wedding pictures will be
moved.
While
traditional wedding photography tends to impose order and
structure to the day, a photojournalistic style takes advantage
of unscripted moments in order to better tell the story.
That's what attracted photojournalist and WPJA member Karin
von Voigtlander of Rochester, N.Y., USA, to the field. "I
was a couple of months out of college and looking for a
job," she says. Wedding photography was not an option
-- too staid for her taste. But then she saw online WPJA
founder David Roberts' wedding photography and realized
she could marry her training as a photojournalist to wedding
photography. Now she balances her photojournalism work at
the Rochester Democrat and Chronicle with wedding photography.
Three years ago, the photojournalistic style caught the
eye of Josef Isayo, a Los Angeles, CA, USA-based wedding
photographer. Isayo was working as a photojournalist for
The Seattle Times and Denver Post, among other publications,
when he discovered the photojournalism style in wedding
photography and it changed his mind about weddings. Now,
he approaches weddings as he did editorial assignments.
"I don't have an inventory of things to shoot. I shoot
with my emotions."
And
he credits brides and grooms for furthering the evolution
of wedding photojournalism. "Weddings are more exciting
to shoot today because people are more visual now,"
he says, and that carries over to location, fashion, and
details, like flowers. "People want art photos. They
want something better than their parent's wedding pictures."
—
by Lorna Gentry for The Wedding Photojournalist Association
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