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6 Tips for Filming Spring & Summer Weddings

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The warm climate and budding plants signify a wedding season and plenty of wedding filmmakers. S. Are they getting ready for a number of their first-rate seasons? While beautiful spring and summer season weddings aren’t constantly sunshine and rainbows, direct sunlight and excessive temperatures can cause harsh shadows, overheated cameras, mega sweat, and surprising showers. To keep away from mishaps and make this season an achievement, we’ve compiled six tips to help you move the best heat-weather wedding:

1. Use variable impartial density filters

Midday ceremonies beneath the sun are a couple’s dream; however, a marriage filmmaker? Not so much. Bright daylight causes unflattering shadows and might make staying on the recommended frames in line with the 2nd/shutter pace feel close to impossible. Enter variable neutral density (ND) filters. These incredibly less expensive filters attach to your lens and act as “sunglasses” for your camera. Even in the brightest conditions, these filters assist you in keeping your shutter at 50 with 24fps without cranking up your f-forestall; that means your final pics become just as sharp and smooth as the ones cloudy or golden-hour shoots.

2. Have a spare digital camera

High temperatures notoriously send cameras into overdrive, which means that midway through an outside rite, your predominant frame may want to move kaput. I’ve heard dozens of filmmakers complain about cameras from all brands overheating throughout a marriage day, and their answer is easy: carry backups. I even have two cameras with me, and that variety reaches four once I have 2d shooters. If a digital camera were to crash from heat, I’d always have at least one operating body to seize the key moments. (That stated, I’m virtually geared up to boom my camera body number to 3 as soon as a miles-expected digicam hits the market!) It’s a great approach to being prepared as a marriage filmmaker.

Summer Weddings

3. Be equipped for rain

Sure, rain on a wedding day is good luck. However, there’s not anything fortunate about a waterlogged digicam. If it’s sprinkling, I’ll usually hazard a few shots and then quickly duck below an umbrella; however, if it’s not rainy, I paint with the photographers to discern a plan B. (No wedding is worth risking all of your gear!) That’s why I continually use C. Umbrellas, digital camera backpack water covers, or even bathing caps to maintain my tools’ security.

4. Look for lens flares

While the brilliant sun may be dangerous for cameras, it creates lovely lens flares if you keep your eyes open. I typically capture the flares through photograph classes and setting up photographs (for example, I set aside most creativity during the ceremony to get the crucial moments). At one heat wedding ceremony closing summer season, I could capture so many lens flares both for midday and at night that I timed some to the beat of the spotlight movie track. Have a look at the video at the bottom of this newsletter!

Geneva A. Crawford
Twitter nerd. Coffee junkie. Prone to fits of apathy. Professional beer geek. Spent several years buying and selling magma in Miami, FL. Spent a year lecturing about psoriasis in Las Vegas, NV. Managed a small team writing about circus clowns in Las Vegas, NV. Garnered an industry award while writing about lint in the financial sector. Spoke at an international conference about getting my feet wet with dust in Libya. Spoke at an international conference about researching rocking horses in Bethesda, MD.