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Contact
Chicago Area Wedding Photographers |
Contact
us at (866)LOFTUS-6 or step into the phone booth to receive
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Brief
History of Wedding Photography |
An
article by iqphoto.com |
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The
history of wedding photography begins in the early 1840s.
During this period, photography had very little commercial
use, but the idea of creating memories of the wedding day
was already born.
Mainly
because of equipment limitations, wedding photography remained
studio photography for more then a century. In the 1800s there
were no paper photographs, no multiple photographs, no albums.
There was only a daguerreotype portrait on a tiny copper sheet.
As
the years passed, technology changed how photographs were
produced and presented. Before photographic paper, photographers
used glass plates, tin sheets, and copper sheets. In the beginning
of the 20th century, the production of color photographs became
possible, but the process was too unreliable (until the 1950's)
for professional photography. Colors shifted and faded after
a short period of time, so photographers continued to work
with black and white film.
While
technology led to the invention of new materials used for
producing photography film and better chemistry to process
it, wedding photography techniques remained the same until
the end of WWII.
The
idea of capturing the event itself was born during the "wedding
boom" after the Second World War. This surge created
profitable opportunities for shooting weddings without a contract
or "on speculation". Using their new portable roll
film based cameras and compact flashbulb lighting, photographers
would show up, shoot a wedding and then try to sell the photos
to the bride and groom. Some of them were military trained
photographers, but most were amateurs who took advantage of
the portability of small, newly designed cameras.
Despite
low quality results, these photographers created competition
and forced the studio photographers to start working on location.
Trying to imitate the studio settings, photographers would
have to bring heavy photography equipment and bulky lighting
to wedding locations.
While
it was almost impossible to document a full wedding using
limited amount of expensive film, even candid shots were posed
after the ceremony. The traditional wedding photography style
of beautiful poses created in a studio or on location using
studio quality lighting has been practiced for more then a
hundred years: until the early 1970s it was practically the
only style of wedding photography.
A
dynamic change in the photo industry evolved changing the
traditional wedding photography style into a new style called
wedding photojournalism or documentary style: in other words,
the style which captures the wedding as it unfolds. While
requiring serious skills, talent, and experience this style
was misinterpreted as a series of snapshots which any 35mm
camera equipped amateur could take.
This
opened a gate for weekend shooters who could get away with
a series of candid shots and sell it under the guise of wedding
photojournalism.
While both styles have advantages and drawbacks, neither of
them is the primary style for most professional photographers
today. Driven by the glamorous look of classic photos which
still have their places on the covers of wedding magazines
as well as technological advantages that allow modern photographers
to document a wedding with less effort, clients began requiring
a mixed or blended style of wedding photography.
With
the invention of digital photography, new creative opportunities
emerged. Digital cameras allow deeper coverage of the event
with a virtually unlimited amount of photographs taken, and
great design opportunities. While traditional film photography
is still widely used, it is obvious that the future belongs
to digital photography. |
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Loftus
Photography - Lombard, Illinois |
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We
have photographed weddings in Chicago as well as the following
Illinois towns and citites: Ingleside, Itasca, Joliet, Lake
Forest, Lemont, LeRoy, Libertyville, Lisle, Lockport, Lockport,
Lombard, Long Grove, Manteno, Medinah, Midlothian, Mokena, Mokena,
Montgomery, Morton Grove, and Mundelein, Illinois, Naperville,
New Lenox, Niles, Norridge, Northlake, Oak Forest,
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,
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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