Wedding photography is a reflection of the times we live in. However, this does not mean it should be trendy. Just because you have the tools to alter an image in Photoshop doesn’t mean that you should. Take a step back. Look at the work of the Masters and learn what makes an image timeless.

Photo by Norman Parkinson
A few years ago, I attended the ‘Almost Alone Workshop‘ with Australian photographer David Anthony Williams. It had a profound influence on my approach to photographing weddings. It reinforced my personal style and helped me realize the relationship between the images I create for my clients and the cycles of their lives.
David recently shared with me his thoughts on trends in photography. After my recent Photoshop post production techniques article, I thought it was perfect timing to share this with you.
Let me tell you what worries me…
So many photographers buy the gear, buy the programs, buy the action sets and think they’re a photographer capable of shooting professional standard work. Where do I see the gaps in this?
Great photography has always been about sensitivity, feel and LIGHT.
I worry for so many photographers who go with the quickie ‘wham-bam-thank-you-maam-buy-my-DVD/action set’ seminars and don’t learn and appreciate the fundamentals of light and scene appreciation. There is so much ‘I’ll fix it in Photoshop’.
So what are these people going to do when the current trend is over? … (and make no mistake, the over-processed look will finish)
Let’s remind ourselves that cutting edge in wedding photography thirty years ago was the bride and groom super-imposed into a brandy sniffer…then the bride and groom on the back of a Harley with sunglasses…more recently, spot coloring on Black and White.
But this WAS cutting edge at one point.
Let me quote two names to you: Richard Avedon and Norman Parkinson (books on both you should have in your collection!) You will observe that apart from the obvious give-away of clothing fashions — the work is timeless and not trendy.

Photo by Norman Parkinson

Photo by Richard Avedon
Timeless and not trendy. Something all of us should aspire to in our very important work.
7 comments