I had the honor of being the second photographer as Rachel and Tyler tied the knot at Temecula's beautiful Europa Village winery in the heart of Southern California wine country.
I was able to work with one of Temecula's best wedding photographers, Anthony Godinez of Anthony David Photography. Check out some of his amazing work here: http://www.weddingphotography-temecula.com
It was a great event in a beautiful setting. Rachel and Tyler and all their guests looked amazing as the sun set and the lights came on at the winery.
Check out a few of my photos from the event below...
Thanks for having a look!
Mark
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Check out the HDR photos below that I captured at the event. HDR stands for High Dynamic Range, which involves taking multiple exposures of each shot, and then taking the best parts of each exposure and merging them together along with some other ingredients in my post processing to create the photos you see here... Photos that have loads of shadow and highlight detail along with great color and structure.
Hot rods, rat rods, muscle cars, classic sedans from the 40s and 50s, roadsters, pick up trucks and many other types of cars were on display. I hope you enjoy viewing these photos as much as I enjoyed capturing them...
Check out more photos at my gallery.
Mark
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The fact is, this image probably could have been taken anywhere. It's not the type of subject you would take a photo of while sightseeing on vacation. But that's the point. Actually forget the vacation or travel thing for a minute. How many times do you walk past the same building on your way to work, Or go down the same road as you leave your home? During our everyday lives, we see the same doorknobs, the same buildings, the same cars, the same people, the same trees. .. You get the idea. Look at the familiar like it's the first time you ever saw it, and I guarantee you will see something different.
To borrow a line from an old Apple advertising campaign from the 90s...Think Different. When you are looking for a more interesting photo, look at things from a more interesting angle. Get low. Get high (No not that). Change your angle. Change your point of view.
What makes the image above a good photo? A different perspective. A different angle. Texture. Contrast. Eye movement. Simplicity. Intrigue. All of the above.
The image on the right was also taken on a street in downtown Scottsdale. This time there is some desert-looking foliage to help sell the idea that it really is someplace warm. But what makes this a good image? In a word, repetition. I love repetition. In a photo, anyway.
Here the repetition comes from the posts cascading down the right side of the image and the repeating, angled casted shadows coming up from the bottom. To keep it from getting to monotonous, the repetition on the right side is broken up by a small shape that looks like a giant, clay salt shaker.
The somewhat monochrome building structure contrasts with the brilliant green in the center of the photo. Everything draws your eye to the center of the image. A hint of green in the foreground points the way down the path. There is an interesting reflection and play of dappled light on the posts on the right side.
The image is also cropped in such a way that the structure in the foreground almost forms a frame around the scene. It is not symmetrical. Almost, but not quite. That's a good thing.
But for all those things that are going on in the photo, it still maintains a key element for a good photo: Simplicity.
My instructors in college called me stupid. Well, not really. They said "Keep it Simple Stupid..." or KISS. The best design and photography are often filled with simplicity.
Like the image of the buildings at the top of this post, the image of the headlight above again could have been taken almost anywhere. It is some detail from an old Jaguar parked on the street in Scottsdale. Sure, I could have photographed the entire car... Yawn. This image is much more interesting to me.
Making it a black and white made it a study in contrast and texture... Contrast between the complexity of the left side of the image against the smooth background bokeh of the right side of the image. And texture from vertical lines on the lens of the headlamp on the car.
And overall, it is a simple image.
The two images above are the same elements of the same bridge in Scottsdale.
The image on the left image shows a portion of the bridge, but is not a particularly interesting photo.
For the image on the right, I pointed my camera straight up with a wide angle lens (20mm) while standing right in between the giant steel pillars for a more dramatic point of view. The image has more scale. It contains only three primary elements - the two pillar shapes that fill the top and bottom of the photo, and the sky which seems to get squeezed between the ends of the two massive silver cylinders like two oversized metallic rolling pins.
This image has both an interesting point of view and simplicity.
So next time you find yourself on vacation or on your way to work and you have your camera with you (you always do because your phone has a nice little camera, right?), look at things from a different point of view before you capture that scene.
And Keep it Simple, Stupid.
Mark
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