Unless I missed it in this thread somewhere, I've seen no one comment on the
staging of the ceremony afterwards to compensate for either the lack of
flash during or no shooting at all during the ceremony. I've had pretty
good success and complete cooperation from the clergy in this matter thus
No, they are not. There is no legal polygamy and those who practice
polygamy are not Mormons.
--
Best regards,
Bruce
Wednesday, January 7, 2004, 12:14:59 PM, you wrote:
JCOC Aren't the mormons the ones that engage in legal polygamy?
JCOC jco
JCOC
Jostein [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Oh, give'em a couple of centuries. They'll thaw up.
Buddhism looks better...:-)
Speaking of which:
Has anyone ever photographed a Buddhist wedding?
And if so, what form of Buddhism? (Tibetan, Zen, etc.)
--
Mark Roberts
Photography and writing
Hello Bob,
You may be mixing up Temples and regular church buildings. Based on
your description, you went to a regular church, not a temple.
--
Best regards,
Bruce
Wednesday, January 7, 2004, 12:51:31 PM, you wrote:
BW Hi,
Wow, must not be in Utah.
BW France and England. When I was 14 I
- Original Message -
From: Bruce Dayton
Subject: Re[2]: Cheap bastards? -was: Down off my high-horse... with a
thump.
One real issue/problem is that the general percieved value of a
photograph has steadily declined as the ability to make/create one has
increased. Many years ago
hasn't gained the knowledge of photography was pretty poor. But with
good PS cameras and mini labs, the ability for anyone to create a
passable snapshot has made them feel that the value of the item
(photo) isn't very high. After all, all I did was press a button. I
really didn't have to know
Why is it the Catholics, who have been around for a couple of thousand
years, will allow me to shoot from the alter, as long as I don't make a
spectacle, but some wannabe cult that was born last week makes my life
miserable?
Go figure. I don't get it.
William Robb
William, it depends on the
Bill said:
On the heels of the AF revolution came the PJ style of wedding
photography, which to me requires as much skill as squishing a wounded
bug.
Jeez Bill, hope tv doesn't read that...
I totally disagree with you on that point. I am hopeless at PJ photography
and I don't really like it
make the money - and you don't have to lug 50 lbs of
Mamiya gear around to do it.
--
Robert
- Original Message -
From: Bruce Dayton [EMAIL PROTECTED]
To: frank theriault [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Sent: Tuesday, January 06, 2004 7:41 PM
Subject: Re[2]: Cheap bastards? -was: Down off my high-horse
promised. Ceremony ends and priest thanks me for my assistance (?!?) and
then congratulates me on a job well done
I think some priests have had very bad experiences in the past and they
prefer to be safe than sorry. We photographed a wedding where apart from us
there were 7 or 8 other people
- Original Message -
From: Amita Guha
Subject: RE: Re[2]: Cheap bastards? -was: Down off my high-horse... with a
thump.
The Presbyterian church where we got married (200 year old congregation)
didn't allow photography during the service, but we knew about that well
in advance. I
Bitch and moan, bitch and moan, wah, wah, wah.
Just to counteract the horror stories...
- I like most of my clients. Every once in a while I get hired by a
twit, but generally they're very nice people who treat me well. In
fact, most of them treat me like I'm doing them a favor.
- I shoot what
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