(an iPhone photo of) contact prints from my new large format (8×10!) camera. I have a feeling I’ll be toting this one around a lot this year …
P.S. Don’t you just love Alexis’s black tulle ballgown?
photos: Gia Canali
pursuing the picture perfect wedding
(an iPhone photo of) contact prints from my new large format (8×10!) camera. I have a feeling I’ll be toting this one around a lot this year …
P.S. Don’t you just love Alexis’s black tulle ballgown?
photos: Gia Canali
Okay, it’s time for some changes (nay, resolutions) around here, like: it’s time to pay more attention to the blog (seriously!) and I’m going to start blogging about other kinds of photographs in this space, too. I think it’ll be more fun for all of us that way. Lots of you have moved on from your weddings, but you may want to commission other sorts of photographs (and I like taking and talking about getting great other sorts of photographs). We’re still calling the blog {Pursuing the Picture Perfect Wedding}, but we’re going to broaden our scope.
In good faith, I’m starting with a Polaroid 55 I took over the summer as part of a family portrait session done all in Polaroid 55 film. The best portrait sessions are the ones with the simplest concepts. In any case, I like how quietly festive this image seems. That’s how I like to celebrate New Year’s Eve every year.
photo: Gia Canali
In fact: scratch that “when all else fails” business. Before all else fails, plan to enjoy the ride regardless. Weddings will always be full of the unforeseeable (and, really, that’s part of the thrill!). After all, the real reason we are gathered here today, so to speak, is the celebration of you and your beloved joining hearts and lives.
photo: Gia Canali

In weddings, the imperfections are part of what makes everything so real and vibrant, so personal, so particularly you. The same could be said of wedding photos. We like to give our clients lots of “perfect” pictures. But these sort of messy, imperfect ones always melt me, which is why I will continue to bring my crappy toy cameras with me everywhere. Even to “work.” Even when I am frustrated with their unsolvable probably-part-of-the-charm limitations.
Low-fi photos bear a keen link to memory. Other photos, the refined ones, show the wedding more perfectly than we can remember. Lenses on fancy cameras are more perfect than the human eye … and the human memory. But not these.
(p.s. This couple fantasized about all their guests shooting the wedding on their iPhones with Hipstamatic. I think that would have been fantastic: like cameras-on-the-reception-tables v 2.0).
photo: Gia Canali