Jayne

This is my friend Jayne. She recently asked me to do some pictures for her new website. Jayne is a practitioner of Empathic Coaching and wanted a picture that would strike the right balance of empathic and professional to help with marketing her business. Unfortunately I was only able to meet her to do the pictures in the evening, and as any fellow Scots know, January evenings are dark! This meant wrestling again with whatever indoor lighting Jayne had in her house and augmenting it with my flashgun. Using the flash through a diffuser and keeping it fairly close to Jayne allowed the flash light with its neutral colour to dominate the light. The background domestic lighting has only added a little warmer balance to the scene, and thankfully no awful greenish fluorescent tones.

This first picture is a guilty pleasure for me. I was only taking a setup shot to check the light, and so Jayne wasn’t really expecting this to be used. I just can’t help liking it though. There is something very intense and compelling about it. A monochrome treatment and a virtual masking on the right of the picture has produced a very classic look, reminding me of old polaroid peel-apart portraits or test shots. I just love it.

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In terms of what we were trying to achieve, Jayne was just great to work with. She is naturally someone who connects easily with you in conversation, and once the unease of a large umbrella being stuck close to her diminished, she just continued working with me as though we were having a great conversation. The result is that the viewer of her portraits will surely feel that same connection to her. This one is almost perfect for the brief.

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This one is lightened a little by Jayne’s smile.

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I love the blend of smile and connection in this one.

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Slightly more seriousness again in this one. The colour signals warmth again however.

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After the shoot, Jayne and I ended up discussing the amazing difference that small facial expression changes made to how a picture makes the viewer feel. Hopefully Jayne will have no difficulty matching a few of these pictures to the web pages that she wants them for. I learned a lot about working with a subject to transmit something through the image that is fairly subtle, but hugely important for the job. Once again, the ease of sharing the images as we went along with a digital camera made it easy for Jayne and I to discuss the subtle changes and to continue to make adjustments as we went along.

Good learning for me, and great fun spending time photographing Jayne. Oh and thanks for the soup and homemade bread. Delicous!

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Castle Stalker

This is Castle Stalker in Appin in Northern Argyll.

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ISO 3200   22mm x 1.6CF   f9   1/20

Today was a wet and overcast day with nothing exciting in store, so for some reason it occurred to me that doing a landscape would be an interesting challenge. Apart from anything else, I have had some nice Cokin grad filters for 2 years now and haven’t even put them on the camera! So arriving in Appin the weather was bleak, drizzly and uninspiring. I walked a little to find a position that seemed to best set the castle against the background mountains, and set up my rarely-used tripod. I added the grad filter, and looked at the effect using live view to place the grad line for what I thought was the best effect. I then proceeded to make the most enormous mistake that a novice landscape shooter can make, I entrusted the ISO setting to auto! Considering I used my tripod, set mirror lock-up, used a remote release to minimise shake, this was colossally negligent; the result was ISO 3200! I spotted this thankfully, and shifted manually to ISO 100 to take my subsequent pictures, but oddly, this was the one that I liked best. Technically it was noisy, however, Lightroom did wonders for the noise levels, and I applied a nice treatment preset that I had downloaded through the Lightroom plugin site, (Mixtonesoft by Gavin Phillips), and then made some spot adjustments to bring out details.

There you have it, it shouldn’t have worked, but I like the result anyway.

Lessons: 1. Don’t trust Mr. Canon to set your ISO, he always seems to get it wrong. I know this from portraiture anyway, so what was I thinking!!! 2. The weather being crappy doesn’t stop you having a go; post processing can really accentuate moodiness.

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Karen and Tommy’s Wedding

This is my friend Karen and her new husband Tommy on their wedding day in Inveraray. Julie and I had the great pleasure of photographing the wedding early this September. This lovely picture of the happy couple in front of Inveraray Castle is of course the highlight of the story of their day, but I thought you would like to see one of the formal wedding pictures that we did straight up front. I love this picture and I’m sure the strong associations with Inveraray where they met and were later married will always have a resonance for them.

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However earlier in the day Julie and I arrived at Karen’s Mum and Step-Dad’s house to find the rain-soaked garden full of celebratory and joyous touches like these:

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Shortly after us, the wedding girlies arrived to begin their preparations.They were such a lovely group of girls and just a photographer’s dream; they let Julie and I simply get on with catching moments while making us both feel really welcome.

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Of course Julie wasted no time getting down to photographing the beautiful dress and shoes which still awaited Karen. The details on this dress were amazing.

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More detail from Karen’s dress here:

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Julie was tickled-pink by these stunning shoes and as a result could only limit herself to 326 pictures of them; you can really see why…

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But of course, wedding preparations are about people, and I managed to catch Karen and her mum helping each other with the finishing touches to some stunning make-up. This one in the bedroom wardrobe-mirror:

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This one without the mirror; doesn’t Sheena look stunning!

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Simultaneously the wedding girlies are turning into bridesmaids; check the gorgeous hair detail here:

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However, nice as hair can be, and wonderful as dresses and veils are, what wedding girlies really get motivated by are….Shoes! Karen here with make-up applied, and hair just beautiful, indulging a little shoe-talk before the final dressing.

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Eventually, this all leads to Karen donning her dress and becoming a fully prepared lovely bride. By this time in the day I had left Julie to be the attached-photographer with the girls, while I wandered into Inveraray to meet the groom’s family and friends for some photos. Julie took this one of Karen in the garden with Loch Fyne behind:

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Julie caught this one of Karen’s mum and nephew Evan; what a wonderful moment after the full kilt outfit has been donned!

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It contrasts particularly well with this earlier, more playful moment with Evan:

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By now we have actual, beautiful bridesmaids. Loch Fyne again is the background:

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And Karen by now ready to go looking just wonderful:

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And with the now full complement of Bridesmaids, Karen only awaited the car:

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Which duly arrived. Check the detail on this amazing vehicle:

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Meanwhile I had arrived at the Argyll Hotel to find the Groom’s party getting in the mood and putting the final touches to their Highland Regalia. As Tommy’s family are Mancunians this was probably a very strange experience for them. Tommy as the sole non-Scot in this picture with David and Derek carries it off like a native I’m sure you’ll agree!

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I’m not sure what I was shooting for in this one, but somehow “Reservoir Dogs” – Argyll is what I achieved.

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This one of best man, Anthony,  is brilliant. Between his eyes catching the light, and my flash diffuser adding catchlights, his eyes look amazing. He was conversing with someone in a first floor window, leading one to spot a certain Romeo-beneath-the-balcony vibe!

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I managed to snatch 5 minutes inside the hotel with Tommy on his own, and using natural window light nabbed this striking picture of him. I hope he likes it, I know I am delighted with the lighting. He looks great!

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However, the lads were just killing time before the church service in the town. Karen’s brothers Derek and David headed off to supervise the guests’ arrival. Game on!

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This lovely lady was playing the magnificent pipe organ before anyone arrived. Karen and Tommy had requested light and happy music for the wedding and so as I set up some lenses for the service, I was treated to “Mairi’s Wedding” and similar Scottish traditional classics. These were good choices, I couldn’t have been anymore up for a wedding as a result.

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The church was beautifully prepared for the service. The Inveraray church is a wonderful building with two sides, one the English church and the other the Gaelic church. You can’t miss it as the main road through Inveraray actually flows around both sides of it. I didn’t photograph it however, as it was being renovated by Historic Scotland and was fully clad in scaffolding and tarpaulin. The inside was lovely and quite unaffected:

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Inveraray’s best known and finest piper was setting the mood for the happy union before the first guests arrived.

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By now the main street in Inveraray had started to fill up with locals and visitors alike anxious to see the Bridal Party arrive.

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Bridesmaids first of course, led here by Kim.

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Mum’s arrival being celebrated by her waiting sons!

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Well, just when expected, Inveraray had itself a bridal party. Check that Beauford!

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But more importantly, check the contents of the Beauford. One beautiful bride and one proud step-dad.

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I love this arrival picture.  All of the watchers from the town, Karen looking lovely and look how happy John is as he prepares to walk her up the aisle!

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Of course, within the church Tommy and Anthony await.

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Finally folks, we have a wedding. John has walked Karen down the aisle and is ready to hand her to Tommy. What was so nice as a photographer was seeing how genuine and affectionate everything about this wedding was. What was more difficult was how low the light levels in the church were. This picture was at f2.8 and despite the motion, only just 1/60th of a second. Motion blur became a serious problem. Only some diffuse flash helped still these scenes.

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Bridesmaids all in place and waiting. Don’t they look gorgeous with their bouquets?

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Finally Tommy’s wait is over. Here are both of them beginning their wedding:

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And their Minister Louis beginning the ceremony…

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And then a close up of their hands during the exchange of rings.

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Leading to this wonderful moment…

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Leading of course to the official signing. Shortly after this moment, I announced to the congregation that I would step out of the picture and let them all grab this moment on their camera-phones and compacts. This is normally a cool and gracious thing for the photographer to do, but it’s not so cool when he knocks over a large bouquet of flowers and its vase as he walks backwards… no really, I did…

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So those outside the church get their first look at the newly married Karen and Tommy.

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Karen briefly gets to mingle outside with friends. Looking seriously beautiful!

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Here are Karen and Tommy back in the car and ready to be whisked off to Inveraray Castle for the formal shots. Getting Karen’s dress back inside that tiny car was an impressive challenge for the bridesmaids.

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This was an interesting challenge photographically. We only had half an hour before the car was due to leave to do the formal pictures including the romantic ones with Tommy and Karen. We pushed our luck to 40 minutes I believe. That of course is what makes wedding photography such a high wire act. Here are the formal family and friend groups:
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Which left us now about 10 minutes with the couple. If I could plan a wedding day in advance I would choose about 30 minutes with the couple. In this case as so often, we only had a short time to choose the best backgrounds and make the best of the light available using simple fill flash. A little post processing to bring out the drama in the sky and this is where we came in to this blog post…

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Simply turning around and moving slightly we were able to select another background. Fill flash again of course.

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And now a little closer. Beautiful dramatic couple pictures.

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As I said, we had a deadline with a car. A final few minutes allowed us to capture Karen and Tommy heading back to the Argyll Hotel for their meal and reception.

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Back at the hotel, the guests were having a lovely time:

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What a wee cutie!

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Julie captured this gorgeous pairing.

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Also this wedding girliefest!

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However, a cake was waiting to be cut before dinner!

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Then of course, there had to be dancing. Tommy claimed not to be much of a dancer, but it was clear that he rose to the occasion magnificently!

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Of course all the guests were rising to the occasion just as magnificently. This was a great party.

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With of course a great band:

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John and Sheena were leading lights of course at the dancing!

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No bride can dance all night of course. Karen eventually needed to take a break and take of those beautiful shoes.

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With the night soon to be over, Sheena and John can be well pleased with the way the day has gone. It was a great wedding and a delight to photograph.

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Congratulations Karen and Tommy!

Photographic thoughts:

First of all, photographing a wedding is always done best with an assistant. In the ideal world, that assistant can switch from being a holder-of-gear such as remote flashguns, to a fully independent second-shooter. Julie was exactly that and has shown that over a few years of photography she has developed a great eye and really strong technical skills in post-processing the raw files. Julie took some brilliant pictures, lots of which are included here. Above all however, Julie has the people skills to get the best from her subjects and to put them at their ease while still thinking about the technicalities of the light. I believe this wedding like her previous ones saw her act like a 7th bridesmaid on occasion helping carry bridal trains and sorting little details on the dress. In short she was brilliant. (Actually I helped carry the train as well after our brief formal shoot, does that make me a sort of 8th bridesmaid)?

Technically, the church was a real low light challenge! It was a challenge with fast lenses, f2.8 constant on my zooms, and f1.8/1.4 on my primes to get better than 1/100th of a second even at ISO 3200. Even with my long 70-200 at f2.8 for the close ups of the couple, I had to shift to ISO 6400. The low light made good noise reduction software a must as well as simply having good low light cameras. My 5d mk2 is decent in this regard, but if anyone feels like upgrading me to a mk3 for real low light challenges like this, then I’ll not say no:-) The noise reduction in Lightroom is very good indeed now, but you still feel you are smearing detail to some extent. It’s interesting seeing some guests photographs on Facebook, and although they have got some lovely photographs inside the church, the noise levels in them are astronomical! The church had some low hanging lights which I had switched off. Although they may have helped the background levels, they hung just at head height and would have been massively bright and distracting in the pictures and would have been all-but-impossible to clone out later.

The reception was lit entirely in purple light with swirling projections and was such a challenge that we had to play the numbers game of taking lots of pictures hoping to get a few sharp ones. Light levels were so low you couldn’t achieve focus-lock at all and so for a few I used manual focus. Those pictures that we did nail, had the swirling projections on people’s faces, so all in all, moody dark lighting for a reception looks great for the guests experiencing it, it makes photography somewhat wing-and-a-prayer.

Overall we were made so welcome at this wedding and had so much fun doing it. Technical challenges aside, it was a great day for us and hopefully we have helped capture as many great memories as possible for Karen and Tommy.

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Mummy’s first baking lesson

Julie was really looking forward to baking with Hannah, so much in fact that she bought matching aprons for them both. Well, flour in, and process started! Hannah loves the hat, but wasn’t so sure about the apron until the bowl and ingredients appeared; then she got serious.

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Hopefully this face-of-concentration isn’t Hannah peaking early. We would quite like that to be applied to maths’n’stuff someday too!

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Mum’s a teacher anyway, so poor Hannah was probably getting the theory of cake firmness here as a function of water content, with just an introduction to the controversies, advantages and disadvantages of the metric versus imperial spoon!

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“Seriously Dad, I’m busy here, go away with the stupid camera”!

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“Now this is the utensil I’ve been waiting for all my life”

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Unbelievably the mixing seemed to go well with very little mess, sadly it couldn’t continue for much longer…

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Sadly Mum had to practise an interventionist teaching approach here, while the photographer had to abandon camera and leap for the kitchen towel which was soon spinning off it’s holder. She got messy!

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Exhaustion/boredom was now winning the day and a quick hug from Mum was essential to revive flagging spirits as the eternity of waiting for the oven was beginning to take it’s toll.

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However, one short sleep later, Hannah enjoyed the pride of the young baker’s first Mum/Daughter cake display. Aww….Chuffdles…

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I did have a bit of a problem in that the main lighting was coming from above and behind Hannah through 2 skylight windows, and a little from her left hand side through a window. The result, not-aided by her chef’s hat, was a shadowy face. I grabbed my Ebay purchased LED light panel, (128 LED’s from memory, and less than £30), and held it in one hand low down to fill in the shadows on Hannah’s face; I’m still unsure about it’s colour temperature, but it seemed to work well as a fill-in with existing daylight. I would judge it to be a little cold, but not miles off daylight Anyway, an interesting accessory for pocket money.

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Claire’s wedding preparation

Last week my niece Claire got married. It was great to see her as she teaches in China, but she chose to get married in Glasgow. Although I wasn’t photographing her wedding, I was asked if I would take some pictures of the bride and bridesmaids getting ready for action before donning my own kilt and heading for the church! It was great fun and Claire and her bridesmaids were very relaxed and lovely about being photographed. It was frustrating having to rush off before they had finished their preparation; I missed them in their dresses and I missed the little touches like close ups of hair accessories and the details of the dress on Claire. However, here is what I managed to get before Claire sensibly sent me away to get ready.

 

Here is Claire beginning her make-up process:

Here is the very talented make-up artist at work; the girls were thoroughly pampered with hair experts on hand as well.

Indeed here is Lara getting some of that pampering in the classic mirror shot.

Here is Karen with her hair looking gorgeous and a little time to savour the occasion.

and here is Heather relaxing in similar fashion, hair in perfect order.

This is Em

Jo looking amazing.

and doing her best to overcome some deep shyness. Jo is getting married later this year in Singapore; I have offered to photograph the wedding of course, but it turns out they already have a local photographer arranged. Ah well!

Let me introduce the flower-girls, Emma and Hannah with Em. Aren’t they lovely!

It just didn’t seem right that Lara was only photographed in a mirror, so that had to be sorted.

Emma again.

Hannah.

Back to Claire, a little further on in the process. I like the window light on this one, it seems so warm and three-dimensional.

Here’s Karen providing girlie support for Claire as the make-up application reaches the final stage.

Flower girls need cliche photographic treatments too!

Finishing touches only now, ladies and gentlemen, we have a bride.

The real business of the day is not hair and make-up however, it is really about stoking the girly-furnaces with sweetmeats, coffee, exotic fruits and chocolates. You just can’t waft around looking feminine and being fragrant on porridge and wafer.

And here are the stunning results of all of that pampering and fuelling. Claire looks amazing.

 

 

I believe the shoes are seen as a little classier than Clarks patent products…

I believe the ring here has some small significance for the day.

Some more of the girls in the final stages of preparation:

I just couldn’t love these more. “Does this look okay”?

“Yes, it does, doesn’t it”.

This beautiful young woman is my niece!

Here’s the dress.

And here is the very lovely detailing:

And speaking of very lovely…

Here’s my sister in law in very-proud-mum-mode as she begins getting ready. I don’t have a sister, but I think of Linda as that. My brother did a terrific job when he married Linda!

If you thought the fruit, hair, make-up, chocolate, pretty togs etcetera would be enough to launch the walking/wafting festival of femininity that is the bridal party, you would be wrong; girlies need gifts!

Girlies love gifts!

 

These young beauties look amazing with hair all prepared, but I can tell you they were angels a little later in their dresses, but that was for some other photographer to enjoy.  🙂

Claire and her five lovely bridesmaids are all friends in China. How amazing that they all came together in Scotland for this special day.

Oh, I forgot, the hairdressing, the make-up, the fruit, the gifts, etc. Not enough apparently?

Here’s to Claire. Congratulations. x

Claire and her mum. The wedding was wonderful and everything went perfectly from the “I do” to the last dance.

 

Special thanks are due to Linda’s friend Donna, who stepped in about midnight the night before, offering to help me by holding my flashgun and diffusing umbrella. Donna had to rush around to get ready too, and so the time she gave helping out was really generous. It will of course teach her not to drink wine with me again!

Thanks Donna.

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