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Capturing Moments | A Photojournalistic Approach

January 23, 2012 | Posted in Wedding Tips, Weddings

When asked to describe my style of photography, I normally explain that I shoot 90% of the wedding day photojournalistically and approximately 10% with posed portraits of the bridal party and the newlyweds. I absolutely love the photojournalistic style and really enjoy capturing moments as they unfold.

So what is wedding photojournalism?

Wedding Photojournalism is a photographic style that involves capturing candid, unposed moments throughout a wedding day in the most unobtrusive manner possible. Photojournalistic photographers are visual story-tellers, documentarians of the many moments that compose a wedding day. They capture as best they can without interfering, allowing emotions to occur naturally and capturing events as they unfold.
[To see a more complete definition: Wedding Photojournalism]

Annapolis Maryland Wedding Photojournalist
My favorite images are often those that occur naturally, such as the image above of Lauren’s mom seeing her daughter as a beautiful bride and the photograph below of Kristin & Patrick getting cheers from visitors of the Naval Academy after their ceremony! These moments tug at my heartstrings, they make me happy, and they reflect the day in such an honest and pure way… It doesn’t get much better than that!

For the majority of the wedding day, I am the little fly on the wall – documenting all of the important events, abundant laughter, and stolen kisses while doing my best to just let things happen – candidly! And in this way, I consider my style to be (predominantly) photojournalistic!

Naval Academy Wedding
At the same time, however, I am not a strict traditionalist when it comes to adopting a photojournalistic style. I’m more of a quasi-photojournalist. Although I do spend the majority of a wedding day allowing events to unfold, I have this artistic love of constructing the scene for portraits of the bride and groom. Oh and the details, I have a slight obsession with details… but that’s a different post in the making! (A much longer post with dozens of exclamation points and smiley faces!) I enjoy incorporating details into posing as well, having a little more control over background, and my subject’s positioning in regard to the light.

I love to find a gorgeous location, setup my couple in a sun-soaked background, before stepping away to capture the scene. Using a longer lens, I leave the couple with a sweet anecdote or I ask them to think about a special memory and just talk about what they loved most about it – quietly backing away. It only takes a couple of moments before they are laughing candidly, smiling at one another, and blissfully unaware of my camera off in the distance.

And it is in this way that I aim to capture genuine happiness and love in my photographs. Capturing the connection that two people share, documenting the spark that exists between two soul mates… It’s incredibly fulfilling task.

So by mixing my love for portraiture with my desire to capture life candidly, I’ve developed this very blended style that – I believe – incorporates the best of both worlds! And that’s my slightly longer answer to the famous… “How would you describe your style?” Question! Hah!

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Brides Choice Awards Winner & SWIBA Finalist 2012

January 20, 2012 | Posted in Weddings

If you’re one of my amazingly supportive and incredibly appreciated Facebook followers, then you probably heard this news a few days ago! Each year Wedding Wire selects the top 5% of its wedding professionals nationwide to receive a Brides Choice Award. There are so many incredibly talented wedding photographers in the Maryland, Virigina, and DC area – that I feel blessed to even be a part of this very talented network!

I’m excited to announce that Natalie Franke Photography has won a 2012 Bride’s Choice Award!

This marks my third year in a row winning a Bride’s Choice Award (2010, 2011, 2012) and is the perfect way to kick-start the quickly approaching wedding season! I have been blessed to have worked with so many incredible couples and am grateful for each and every one of them!

To All my Couples: Thank you for leaving so many heartfelt reviews, thank you for supporting me, and thank you for hiring me to document these moments in your lives. Your love stories inspire me, your weddings captivate me, and your kind words keep me going each and every year. You’re the best.

Stiletto Women in Business Award

I’m also incredibly excited to announce that I was nominated and selected as a Stiletto Woman in Business Award Finalist for Young Entrepreneur of the Year AND Photography Business of the Year! Out of 300 submissions, I feel BEYOND blessed to be listed with so many other incredible women including Me Ra Koh and Keri Doolittle – who women who have inspired me in my own photography career! You can view all of the amazing finalists here, SWIBA Finalists.

Stiletto Woman is focussed on empowering women in business and through the SWIBA Awards aims to honor women in solo and micro business across the nation. Founded by Karlena Wallace in 2009, the Stiletto Brand has become a marker for mentoring, coaching, and supporting women in business for the past three years!

I’m so humbled and honored by all of this! Thank you so much for believing in me and giving me the little push that I needed heading into the New Year!

Even More News to Come: As a few of you heard earlier this week, I have one more exciting announcement on the way next month! It’s something I thought was a long-shot, but now will be coming true! I promise to let everyone know as soon as I can!

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A Living Photograph | The Value of Print

January 18, 2012 | Posted in Personal

Despite what you may think by the images below – This is not a post about how much I love canvas prints. And don’t get me wrong, I absolutely adore having images blown up on canvas… but that’s a different post for another day. You see, today’s post is about something a little bit bigger than just a canvas print. It’s about an issue that a few photographers have talked about recently. An issue that I feel like I also need to talk about.

Today’s blog post questions why we, as photographers, are so quick to allow our images to live on the computer. It’s about the importance of bringing our memories to life in a tangible way. I’m one of the guilty ones, who stores all of my personal photographs in a folder on my desktop, who posts them to Facebook, sends them in emails, but never gets around to printing them.

Canvas On Demand ProProfessional Pictures on Canvas

It’s impossible to deny the fact that we live in a digital world. From the moment I wake up until I fall asleep, I’m attached to some sort of visually electronic device – regardless of whether we think about it or not, we are absolutely glued to our smart phones and computers. And between sharing images on social media sites, online viewing galleries, Instagram, you name it – our images spend the majority of their time behind the computer screen.

So we must ask ourselves… Why do we no longer print our cherished photographs?

I’ve always thought of professional photography as a piece of art, not simply a snapshot, not merely an image. A photograph that captures a moment, that preserves a feeling or emotion, should never be diminished to existing solely on a computer screen. A piece of art, as significant as a photograph, deserves to be printed… it deserves to be passed around the coffee-table or hung on a wall for all to see. It deserves to exist in the three dimensional world, separate from virtual reality. Photographs deserve a physical place in our lives.

I remember reading a post by Mary Kate McKenna about how “The Cobblers kids have no shoes” and I’ve always thought it was funny how, “The photographer has no photographs of herself and her family.” – Maybe it’s because we’re often the ones behind the camera, capturing special moments for others… Maybe it’s because even when we do manage to have photographs taken of ourselves and our loved ones we don’t take the time to print them in personal albums or minimally in 4×6′s to frame around the house.

I have to laugh at the fact that I probably have printed more photographs of my clients as gifts, than I have of my own friends and family. And the very few photographs that clutter my desk and walls are from childhood – in the days of film, when an image needed to be printed to be appreciated.

I would like to believe, at least in some fundamental way, that the importance of printing photographs did not die with the emergence of the digital era. That somehow printing a photograph on canvas gives it more significance. That being able to hold an photograph in my hands means more than clicking through an online gallery…

I’m not trying to belittle the incredible gift that technology and computers offer the modern day photographer… I’m not trying to say that sharing images online is bad or that I’m not in love with having my iPhone image gallery with me 24/7. My goal is simply to encourage photographers, both professional and amateur, to remember that images were never meant to live behind a screen. Photographs should be printed. They should be held and shared on a personal level. Talked about between friends. Enjoyed in a family room.

To print a photograph is to give life to a memory.
Just a sentiment from a child of the digital era… from a photographer trying to change her own ways.

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  • natalie franke annapolis wedding photographer

    I'm a lifestyle and wedding photographer from Annapolis, Maryland with a passion for capturing life's most precious moments. This blog is a combination of my latest photography work, my life as a twenty-something entrepreneur, and my experiences as a bride to be! I'm happy that you've stumbled across my little piece of the universe!

  • In May 2011, I launched Bayside Bride with my best friend Krista Jones as a way to inspire local brides and help connect them with all the fabulous local vendors this area has to offer.

  • Starbucks Blonde Roast Coffee

    Instagram

    Southern Weddings Magazine

    Awaiting the delivery of my Nikon D4

  • I’m incredibly honored to be a member of these awesome organizations.

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