Shelia and Bob’s wedding was classic New England- the white clapboard church, horse drawn surrey, and of course, a cup of Del’s lemonade for guests at the reception. Here’s the highlight reel, from morning yoga to reception on a picture perfect day…
We were arranging the session for engagement pix at the beach. “We’re going to stop for ice-cream first” they said. Since they chose a Cinema package, Mark came along and added a little clip from the beach shoot, with a detour at Frosty Freez of course. SWEET!
Here’s a clip from Tina and Ryan’s wedding at Astors’ recently. The ceremony blessing was delivered by a good friend. It’s an example of some of the “natural sound” that we mix with music on the final edited production. It’s not too late in some cases to add this to your current still coverage for 2010. email us for availability for your date!
Lisa and Tyler were in town checking off items on the wedding to do list. Our plan was for some nice sunset pix by Easton’s, but that late day fogged rolled in and turned our shoot into a more ethereal set of images. No matter. My spontaneous couple took it in stride. the camera loves you when you do this, and loved these two as well. Here’s a Cinema trailer from the engagement session.
We debuted our new Cinema motion picture coverage last month with Katrina and TJ’s engagement trailer, and this month we’re featuring Mary Kay and Mike. There spring wedding was fabulous, and the highlight reel is a perfect complement to the still photo coverage. Fun, upbeat and easy to watch. Want one?
Katrina and Tj shared their stories on this Armor & Martel Cinema production recently in Newport. We had a blast shooting the session, and Mark’s editing and camera work is right on- giving credit where it’s due! Armor & Martel Cinema films are new this season, and are in limited availability. We hope you like the film. If your interested in a perfect complement to your A& M still coverage, and a departure from the usual, check in with us for your wedding date….
“If your pictures aren't good enough, you're not close enough.” by Robert Capa before he got too close to mine that killed him, while covering Indochina.