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asheville wedding reality check Archive

StudioWed Asheville Wedding Reality Check :: Unplugged Wedding

CNN had a great article about the newest wedding trend, unplugged weddings. We think it can be a valuable idea for your wedding to allow your guests to enjoy themselves and for your photographers to do their jobs? What do you think, would you have an unplugged wedding?

Wedding photos: When snap-happy guests go too far

(CNN) — The best weddings are often the ones that celebrate the couples’ personalities. It shows in the details — from Broadway show tune processionals and choreographed dances to “Star Wars”-inspired cake toppers and “The Lord of the Rings” costumes.

More and more, how a couple chooses to document their wedding is yet another extension of their collective identity. Just as technology and smartphones are changing the way we interact with each other, they’re also shaping decisions around wedding-day pictures.

Some couples are crowdsourcing images from guests to complement or even replace professional photography. At the same time, some couples are asking guests to “unplug” and put away their cameras and phones altogether.

The varying approaches are just the latest example of how people are responding differently to technology’s increasing grip on our everyday lives.

“Everyone’s a photographer now. It used to be that six megapixels was a pro camera. Now you have that on your phone,” said Rocky Bowles, education producer of SmugMug, a file-sharing website that allows wedding photographers to host virtual storefronts. “For clients and couples, it’s great because they have so many options. For photographers, it makes the competition serious.”

Most Americans are bombarded with images and media all day, sharing everything on social media platforms, said Chicago-based photographer Angela Garbot. The need to share is heightened at a momentous event like a wedding.

“Regardless of what kind of photographer you are, we all know that the best camera to take a picture with is the one you have in your hand,” she said.

Garbot doesn’t see crowdsourced wedding photography as a threat to the professional craft. In fact, she teaches classes in iPhone photography.

“I see it as another tool in your tool kit. It’s not going anywhere, so we might as well embrace it,” she said. “But just because you’re taking pictures with a phone doesn’t give you license to take bad pictures.”

For couples who love the limelight, the more pictures the better, regardless of quality, said Ohio-based wedding photographer Corey Ann Balazowich, who recently extolled the virtues of the “unplugged” wedding ceremony in a Huffington Post column.

Others prefer to keep their weddings more low-key. “I understand both sides completely, but after seeing the results from a few weddings that used wedding app image collectors and hashtags, there’s not a whole lot in there that is worth keeping,” Balazowich said, acknowledging she’s “a bit pickier than most” when it comes to judging the quality of images.

Elizabeth and Scott Taylor are the kind of folks who don’t enjoy the limelight.

The thought of exchanging vows in front of a crowd was daunting enough; the last thing they needed were camera flashes illuminating the altar throughout the ceremony.

Elizabeth Taylor saw a friend’s Facebook post about “unplugged” weddings in which couples ask guests to refrain from taking pictures. That could help, she thought: People might actually pay attention. It would minimize the chances of snap-happy relatives standing in the aisle, obstructing views of the ring exchange.

“It was already an anxious day for us, so we figured it might help ease everything,” she said. “I just didn’t want flashes going off every two seconds or people standing in the aisle.”

The couple decided to enforce the rule only during the ceremony, the most solemn portion of the celebration, when there’s no opportunity for do-overs. Before the procession, the officiant read a note asking guests to refrain from taking pictures.

Much to the couple’s delight, it produced the desired results. People laughed at inside jokes written into the ceremony and the images came out without a single photo-bombing relative.

It also made shooting the ceremony easier on their photographer, who didn’t have to worry about stepping around guests in the aisle or standing in front of the altar.

It’s not a big deal during the reception, where there are several chances to get great shots. But the ceremony is (hopefully) a once in a lifetime deal, said Balazowich, who has shot several unplugged weddings.

“It’s not me that you’re hurting, it’s the bride and groom and those who have been invited,” she said. “You don’t want to be the person who blocks the first kiss not just from me, but from other guests, or whose flash ruins the shot when the bride’s father is crying as he walks down the aisle.”

Taylor said a few guests expressed disappointment over not being able to take pictures. But overall, the benefits outweighed the drawbacks.

“People weren’t happy with it, but it’s our decision. I really think it was right for us,” she said.

“We’re spending all this money on a photographer. I didn’t want screwed-up pictures.”

Her only regret is that she and her new husband didn’t make it clear guests were welcome to take pictures of the rest of the celebration. It’s a shame, really, because there are now more ways than ever to share images with the couple, other guests and well-wishers who couldn’t make it.

Many couples still want pictures from guests’ perspective to complement professional images, but the disposable cameras of yesterday are slowly giving way to wired solutions.

Some couples ask guests to upload images to photo-sharing websites or smartphone apps that collect them in one place. Others ask guests to attach a unique hashtag to photos on Instagram or Twitter so they can scroll through them at their convenience.

The latest apps do more than simply aggregate images. WedSocial, one of the top-rated wedding apps in the iTunes store, offers couples the chance to create their own website, complete with the couple’s story, wedding party bios and addresses to ceremony and reception locations.

WedSocial founders Jake Moltzahn and Ashley While developed the app, which launched in January, because they could not find a mobile solution to support their wedding plans. Since its launch, traffic on the site has more than doubled every month since launch and paid app downloads are increasing by more than 50% each month, according to chief operating officer Chris Rentner. WedSocial also just took a round of funding in June creating a seven-figure valuation.

Regardless of the method, crowdsourced wedding photography serves multiple purposes, said Garbot, the photographer who also teaches classes on iPhone photography.

It lets smartphone addicts indulge their need to document everything, get the shots they want (of themselves, for example), post, tag and share them as they wish, with the added benefit that others can follow along from afar.

Most importantly, these crowdsourced pictures allow the couple to see the day through guests’ eyes.

“It provides another connection between the couple and their guests, the people they celebrated their wedding with. It gives them another way to communicate,” Garbot said. “Everybody likes to see nice pictures of themselves posted and tagged.”

StudioWed Asheville | Asheville Unplugged Wedding | Asheville Wedding Photography

StudioWed Asheville Wedding Reality Check :: I Do Dances

One of my favorite moments at a wedding are the parent dances. Nothing says love like the look on the father of the bride’s face or the tears in the mother of the groom’s eyes as they dance with their children on their wedding day. Kathleen with I Do Dances has given that precious moment new meaning with choreographed dances, surprise dances and dance lessons. Not only can I Do Dances teach you some fabulous wedding dances with your parent but also for the bride and groom’s first dance, dance lessons at your wedding and even burlesque bachlorette parties. Kathleen makes dancing fun and easy, even for the dancing challenged. I Do Dances gives us their advice for couples ::

Perhaps I’m biased but I can’t help but want to encourage couples to think about their First Dance at least three months out. If they think about it early and decide they don’t want anything special for their First dance or don’t need help then they can knock that off their list of things to do, but if they decide they do want something special they will have time to learn their dance in a stress free and super enjoyable pace!

Get in touch!

I Do Dances | 828.275.8628 | idodances@gmail.com

image credit :: Mozingo Photography

StudioWed Asheville | Asheville Wedding Dances | Asheville Dance Lessons

StudioWed Asheville Wedding Reality Check :: Classic Event Rental

Classic Event Rental has everything to make your wedding beautiful from tents and draping to beautiful furniture to plates, glasses and flatware. Check out their advice for couples in the planning process ::

The CER team just wants you to HAVE FUN with planning. It can get stressful combining two different styles for your big day, but just listen to each other and remember to smile!!

image credit :: Mozingo Photography and Aaron Imaging

Get in touch!

Classic Event Rental | 828.255.2230 | info@classiceventrental.com

StudioWed Asheville Wedding Reality Check :: Blush

Everyone wants to look their best on their wedding and great makeup is essential. Blush is Asheville’s premier wedding makeup, providing top quality makeup for you and all your girls. Wendy with Blush gives us her advice for planning couples.

Hire Professionals…Not your friends. I have seen so many cases where “friends” don’t show up on time or unfortunately cancel coming altogether since the majority of weddings here in Asheville are people from out of town. You need to have 110% faith in your vendors for this day.

image credit :: Two Ring Studios

Get in touch!

Blush | 828.545.9028 | Blushbywendyballance@gmail.com

StudioWed Asheville | Asheville Wedding Makeup | Asheville Makeup Artist