There are lots of wedding shooters who shoot all digital. It's a workflow efficiency issue that is developed with knowledge and experience. Many folks can go through 1000-1500 images and come up with a set of files for proofs in a couple of hours. The key is batch operations and not getting fancy on proofs. Save the custom tweaking for the pictures that go in the albums or enlargements. Since you're working with digital files there isn't any need to go driving off to a lab. Just up load images to places that print them out and then send them back to you. People weren't fast and efficient the first time they printed in a darkroom, digital is no different.
BR > > From: Jim Apilado <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> > Your wedding activities reminded me of some weddings I have done in the > past. I did one wedding exclusively with digital. I decided I will not > longer do a wedding with a digital slr, although I could take many more > exposures than with film. > My reasoning is that there is a lot of post-production labor involving > digital that I never did with film. Exposure corrections, sharpening, > maybe some gaussian blur effect. All takes time. > When it comes to film, I may have some images printed to "hot" and I return > to the lab for correction. I let them correct the error. Yes, it takes > time as well to do this, but I enjoy being inside a camera store looking at > all the toys. > >

