Frank & Doug | Married

Posted: June 3rd, 2011 | Author: | Filed under: Film Work, Weddings, Engagements and Love | Tags: , , , , , , , , , | 18 Comments »

What God and the great State of Connecticut hath joined together, let no man put asunder.

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Laughing Bride

Posted: December 31st, 2010 | Author: | Filed under: Weddings, Engagements and Love | Tags: , , , , , , , , , | 2 Comments »

Beautiful bride in New Britain Connecticut laughs as she is helped into her dress by her mother and sister.  Film portraits bring out the honest beauty of your wedding day.


Ian and Natalya’s Wedding

Posted: July 12th, 2010 | Author: | Filed under: Holga, Weddings, Engagements and Love | Tags: , , , | 17 Comments »

When you are related to a photographer you run the risk that she’ll bring the weird camera when she comes to your wedding. It’s a horrible burden but I think Ian and Natalya, both brilliant intellectuals with a penchant for the artistic flair, bear it well. Congratulations on your beautiful wedding and best wishes for a happy and interesting life!

Who is there? Me.
Me who? I am me, you are you.
But you take my pronoun,
And we are us. ~ Marichiko

Holga Wedding Photography

Holga Wedding Portraits in Connecticut

Connecticut Wedding Photographer

Holga photography in Connecticut

Holga wedding images and portraits are not for everyone but if this kind of special imagery appeals to you let me know!


Moments to Remember at Photography Sessions

Posted: June 21st, 2010 | Author: | Filed under: Randomness | Tags: , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , | 4 Comments »

Now and again things happen at photography sessions that make one laugh, though usually not until a bit later after a glass of wine or two. A small sampling…

  1. I was doing a very casual portfolio building shoot of a friend’s 3-month old son at my house on my back deck. She took her glasses off to get some pictures holding her child without the specs and my own child grabbed her glasses, broke them, and dropped them under the deck. We had to fish them out (or rather, I did, as she really is basically blind without her glasses) using a hook AFTER we located where they were by peering through the wooden boards at the assorted dead leaves below. Finding patterned brown glasses in dead leaves with almost no light is, well, interesting. I told her to let me pay for new ones. Did she? No. They are STILL taped together and that boy is 18 months old now. Every time I see them I feel glasses-guilt. Lesson learned: don’t ever try to do even the most casual shoot with your kids around. This just doesn’t end well.
  2. I did a maternity session for one woman and was doing a set of rapid fire pictures, one after another, of the same pose. When I went back to proof the pictures, as I flipped from one to the next, I realized I could see the baby shifting around inside her womb and causing her abdomen to change shape. I’ve also had a woman have contractions during the shoot; she was a trooper and hiked all over West Hartford Center – in high heeled boots – pausing only briefly during contractions. She admitted she hoped the walking would bring on full labor. No such luck. I did, however, once have a mother go into full labor about 5 hours after our session.
  3. Babies pee on my ALL THE TIME. It’s just part of the job and one reason I wear very casual clothes to shoots. Only once, however, did I manage to actually catch an arc of pee in the air when I pushed the shutter RIGHT as the baby peed. If this happens to you I will add a complimentary 4X6 of that shot for you to tuck away until your child’s wedding rehearsal dinner when you can add it to the slideshow of cute childhood pictures. This will be payback for the sleep deprivation.
  4. At a wedding I once, camera gear hanging from my neck, jumped down a river bank to grab a blow-away ketubah that the wind had snatched and was attempting to introduce to the water, not 15 minutes after every single person in the family had signed it. This was not in the fine print of “How to be a wedding photographer.” I’ve also helped a bride into her dress, which eliminated any sweet “the bride getting dressed” shots but ensured that she actually DID get zipped into her dress.