New York Weddings Event coming up

March 22nd, 2010

I’ve been busy preparing for the NY Magazine’s Weddings Event is coming up April 7th. Last year I went just to check things out and there was such a great vibe and so many wonderful vendors. If you’re planning a wedding this is a cool event to go to to get ideas, talking different vendors all under one roof or take a relaxed approach, collect info to sort through later and enjoy the food and drinks.  It’s like a very jazzed up cocktail party. Get your tickets early though because there were over 700 people attending last year. If you attend wear comfortable shoes and please stop by and say hello. There will be munchies at my table and and a raffle. Plus you’ll get to meet my sister (with a very funny story about how the MOH (me) had to fill in on photo duties at her wedding) and Leanne (one of the brides I got to know last year who is a lot of a fun to hang out with).

weddings-ad_300x250

2010 WeddingWire Bride’s Choice Awards

March 22nd, 2010

For the second year in a row Radhika Photography has received a Bride’s Choice Award from WeddingWire. The award recognizes excellence in quality and service in the wedding industry and is given out only to the top 5% off all wedding professionals. Since this is all about what newlyweds think about our photography and the services it means a great deal. I’m grateful that I had such great weddings last year and got to know so many fun people through them AND that many of you were willing to write out Radhika Photography. There’s nothing better than great reviews from the people we’ve worked for and with!

weddingwire

Health Care story in Mother Jones

January 26th, 2010

I posted the multimedia story I photographed for Time Magazine last summer about the great work Remote Area Medical is doing providing free health care across the country to uninsured Americans. Mother Jones recently published some of the photos so I thought I’d share them with you. motherJones

Honeymoon wedding photos in Paris

January 16th, 2010

This year started off with a “first” for me since I had an assignment in Paris to photograph a couple on their honeymoon.  Wedding photos on your honeymoon is slightly unusual.  Linda and Johnny contacted me the middle of last year about their plans to have a quiet wedding ceremony in Amsterdam (yes, they are Dutch) on December 31st which most of their friends and family didn’t know about.  They were then heading to Paris for their honeymoon and wanted to do their wedding portraits there.  Paris was in the middle of an extreme cold snap with temperatures at zero degrees celsius during the holiday week, but we were fortunate that the sun came out for the morning to help warm things up. What we didn’t count on was Linda and Johnny being something of a tourist attraction during the session. They ended up in countless tourists’ vacation photos and at one point had an Italian school group sing to them in the courtyard of the Louvre and mob them to congratulate them (see below).

To any bride getting married in the winter you might want to take note of Linda’s smart use of long johns under her wedding dress.

Locations: The Louvre, Pont Neuf, Eiffel Tower0004_paris_wedding_portraits

0412_paris wedding portraits

 

0649_paris_wedding_portraits

 

 

 

 

0321_paris_wedding_portraits

 

 

 

0248_paris_wedding_portraits

 

 

0381_Paris_wedding_portraits

0540_paris_wedding_portraits_p

0611_paris_wedding_portraits

0713_paris_wedding_portraits

0721_paris_wedding_portraits

0852b_paris_wedding_portraits

Good vs Great Wedding Photos

January 13th, 2010

I read this article recently and thought it did a great job summarizing many of the things I try to communicate to the couples I talk to about choosing a photographer for their wedding. Hope you enjoy it.

Wedding Photography and the Difference Between Good and Great Wedding Photos

By David Freund

A couple of days ago I was involved in an online discussion about wedding photography and what makes great, soulful wedding photographs. I thought I’d share my thoughts on what takes good wedding photos and makes them great wedding photos.

A couple of years back I had 5 out of 6 straight weddings at the same location, same celebrant and same reception venue. My wife asked how I was able to do different work for each couple. It’s simple. I’m taking photos of two people on their wedding day. Not the venue, not the locations.

I believe there are 3 kinds of wedding photos. Who was there, where it was and what happened.

Old school ‘posed’ photography is often little more than a pictorial record of “who was there”.

The stuff that gets published in magazines and makes photographers famous is “Where it was”. The magazines want to see details of the decorations and locations so other brides buy the magazines for their own wedding research. When they show photos of a bride it’s normally only so they can illustrate what the dress looks like.

Great wedding photos are “What happened”. Photos that capture the unique nature of the couple. Their emotion, their personal connection.

It’s why people put awful, blurry photos of them drunk and stupid on Facebook. Those images have true meaning to the people in them and they feel an emotional connection to the time and place they were taken.

Same with wedding photos. The connection evoked by great wedding photos is one of love between the couple, their families and guests. Not a memory of a photographer telling them how to stand, where to look and how to kiss.

Originally posted at davidfreund.com.au

Lara & Mike, Lincoln Center portraits

December 14th, 2009

Lara and Mike’s wedding December 5th in New York City encountered the first real winter weather of the season which posed a few challenges for the day. Lara’s concession to the wet, slushy weather was to trade her high heels for yellow galoshes for our outdoor portrait session at Lincoln Center. We decided to go ahead with the outdoor shoot despite the ‘interesting’ conditions. What we didn’t count on was a rather eager and unromantic rentacop who decided that my camera looked ‘professional’ therefore I shouldn’t be taking photos without a permit. Never mind that the real police congratulated the couple and just reminded us that as long as we weren’t using a tripod we were ok to do what we liked. I decided that since we had a reception downtown in Greenwich Village in less than 40 minutes that we didn’t have time to try talk to the supervisor and I’d just ignore the security guy and go for the shots we wanted. Lara, Mike, and the bridal party with umbrellas in tow were all game and my assistant managed to keep my flash dry and lighting steady in windy weather in front of the fountain at Lincoln Center. All the while I was trying very hard to ignore the security guy yelling at me to stop taking photos and demanding my business card. We got some great shots very fast and we high-tailed it to the car before he got over his confusion and I got into more serious trouble. By the time we all got into the cars and headed downtown everyone was pretty jazzed by the fun of getting away with doing the photos. It made for a great story at the reception which the best man (Mike’s brother) dutifully told and retold and embellished along the way.  I think I won major points with the bridal party for getting the shots as planned. Too bad we didn’t get any photos of the security guard and the whole scene!

The number one lesson I’ve learned in my years as a photojournalist is keep going until you are absolutely forced to stop doing what you need to do to in order to get the photos.

04_lincoln center

02_lincoln center

01_lincoln center

03_lincoln center

Meghan & Oren

December 10th, 2009

I felt I had to share the portraits from Meghan and Oren’s wedding as a separate post all on their own. The wedding photos will come later. I absolutely loved shooting at the Cloisters on this perfect Autumn day. Well, the light was perfect and the Fall foliage was at its best, but I’m sure Meghan and Oren would’ve loved for it to be a few degrees warmer. I kept telling them to pretend they were in the Caribbean. I’m not sure they were buying that when it was 50 degrees outside, but they got into the spirit of things and their feelings for each other came through loud and clear in the photographs. The kids spotting the kissing couple was a fun moment.

Location: The Cloisters and Fort Tryon Park, New York.

0800_cloisters

0851_cloisters

0836_cloisters

0969_cloisters

1095_cloisters

1035_cloisters

1118_cloisters

Elona & Michael, Newark, NJ

November 10th, 2009

One of Elona and Michael’s wedding guests described Elona as a little firecracker. She’s 5’2″ and definitely has a firecracker personality. Between her great sense of fun on her wedding day and the running jokes about Michael’s duct-taped finger due to a vegetable chopping accident the day before I found myself giggling through most of the day. I also had a blast doing their portraits at the Hoboken Train Station…our choice in case of rain and boy, did it pour. The only drama of the day was a missing rabbi, but the couple handled it all in stride and with the help of a great maid of honor and best man managed to find a replacement rabbi (on a Saturday no less) who performed the ceremony as if he’d known the couple for a long time. I was super impressed.

Getting Ready: Hilton Hotel

Ceremony: The Newark Club

04_2901lr

03_4691lr

05_2916lr

06_3974lr

07_094lr

08_0632lr

09_0918lr

10_1181lr

11_3326lr

12_3614lr

13_5229lr

14_998lr

WPJA contest

October 29th, 2009

This was a very funny photo from a Chinese wedding that placed eighth in the 2009 BRIDES Magazine and WPJA (Wedding Photojournalism Association) Photo Contest in the customs/culture category. The groom and his groomsmen had to put on underwear outside their pants and dance and sing for the bride. I’ve always enjoyed the photos that come out of the games that are played when the groom and his entourage make their way to meet the bride and her bridesmaids.

01_chinese wedding

David Griffin on photography

October 21st, 2009

National Geographic has always set the standard for the highest quality photography and storytelling. In an era were the printed image has taken a backseat to the web it’s still a treat to behold those beautifully printed images in a copy of the magazine to truly appreciate great photography.

I discovered this video of a talk by David Griffin, the Director of Photography for National Geographic,  on another photographer’s blog and thought it was worth sharing.

 

All images © 2024 Radhika Chalasani/Radhika Photography, A Brooklyn New York Wedding Photographer | Blog Theme by Photography Tutorials