Ariel + Joshua — New Hampshire Summer Camp Engagement Portraits

Lake Ossipee engagement session

Oh yeah, this was SUCH a great engagement session!!!  I met up with Ari & Josh in New Hampshire at Camp Cody on Lake Ossipee, where they would hold their wedding a few months later.  It was such a beautiful and FUN place to shoot!   They brought their dog with them and we tromped all over the campground taking pictures, splashing in the water, jumping over logs, dancing in the woods, and leaping out of canoes. This may be my favorite engagement session ever :)

Lake Ossipee engagement session

To start off, they’re gorgeous, and Ari’s dress is fabulous!

Lake Ossipee engagement session

Lake Ossipee engagement session

Lake Ossipee engagement session

Lake Ossipee engagement session

Haha, the pup couldn’t resist the lake!

Lake Ossipee engagement session

Lake Ossipee engagement session

Lake Ossipee engagement session

Oh, not only are the beautiful… they are TOTAL goofballs!!!  Woohoo!

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Lake Ossipee engagement session

Lake Ossipee engagement session

Isn’t this place lovely?!

Lake Ossipee engagement session

Lake Ossipee engagement session

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Then it was time for a little costume change and an all-wine picnic :)

Lake Ossipee engagement session

Lake Ossipee engagement session

Lake Ossipee engagement session

Lake Ossipee engagement session

Lake Ossipee engagement session

Then it was time for our favorite part of the day!  The part where they get in a canoe and recreate their engagement on Phewa Lake in Pokhara, Nepal… and then jump out of the canoe!

Lake Ossipee engagement session

It’s not the Himalayas, but it will certainly do!

Lake Ossipee engagement session

Lake Ossipee engagement session
Lake Ossipee engagement session

Get ready!  We’re gonna do it!

Lake Ossipee engagement session

Even the pup knew what to do :)

Lake Ossipee engagement session

Lake Ossipee engagement session

The poor dog was just panicking, wanting to be with them but having a hard time swimming for so long!  He kept getting out, running back down the pier and jumping into the water again!  He just loves them so much, he had to be with them!!

Lake Ossipee engagement session

I’m surprised I didn’t see more of this dance move at their reception… ;)

Lake Ossipee engagement session

Lake Ossipee engagement session

Not a bad way to the end the day!

Lake Ossipee engagement session

See?!  Wasn’t that awesome?!  Ari & Josh – you guys are the best!  Thank you for being so fun to work with, and such a joy to photograph!

Head on over to Facebook to see more of my favorites!

Going back to Nepal

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Last November, I travelled to Nepal for 2 weeks to work with Code Red Films on a documentary about the sexual exploitation of Nepali girls, particularly those of the lowest castes – the Untouchables. The irony in that was not missed. Among the Untouchable caste are the Badi people – the lowest of the low from the culture’s perspective. In the last 60 years many members of this people group have had to turn to prostitution to survive. Because of this, the word Badi has become synonymous with prostitute and even those who have not worked as prostitutes are discriminated against, face sexual harassment & exploitation, and are usually trapped in extreme poverty.

Nepal

We travelled around Kathmandu and Western Nepal, interviewing survivors and activists, visiting villages and ministries, and learning as much as we could about what is happening in Nepal.  The team also went to India in February to continue researching and documenting the sex trafficking of lower caste girls.  The situation in the brothels of Mumbai and Delhi is abhorrent – truly worse than even your nightmares.  So many girls are held captive, tortured and raped repeatedly for someone else’s satisfaction and yet another’s profit.  And there are THOUSANDS AND THOUSANDS of these girls, with more being kidnapped and brought to India each day.

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What’s Next?

Next week, I am returning to Nepal, and also travelling to Delhi, to continue working on this project.  I am so looking forward to seeing the rest of the team, reconnecting with some of the girls we met last time, and meeting many new people and hearing their stories!   This will likely be our last trip before the final editing commences, as we hope to release the film this Fall.  There is so much work to be done, but God is bringing everyone together and opening doors already and I believe we’ll capture everything we need!

Untouchable Film Crew

 How can you help?

I need to raise $2000 – $5000 to continue my work on the film.  My expenses will include visas, local travel costs, hotel, meals, film & processing, equipment rental/purchase, image post-production, and loss of income.  Your financial support would be such a blessing!  Anything you can contribute will help!  Please visit my fundraising page to donate!

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You can also help by donating some things I’ll need for my trip!  I’m looking for the following to rent, borrow, or keep for this and future projects.  Let me know if you’ve got access and are willing to help!

  • Nikon D4 – Update:  Discounted rental for 3 full weeks provided by our friends at LensProToGo!!!
  • Mamiya 7ii (rental for 3 full weeks)
  • A set of about 300-500 4×6 prints (gifts for the girls we met last time – most of these kids don’t have photographs of themselves, their friends or family).  Update:  Discounted prints provided by our friends at ProDPI!
  • A large sturdy suitcase or duffle bag – good for travelling
  • An iPad for securing model releases easily & without paperwork.  Update:  iPad provided by a friend!
  • Tips & advice on how to stay cool in Delhi’s 105+ degree heat!!!

Nepal

You can also support the film by spreading the word and encouraging your friends to support my trip!  Go to my fundraising page to become a Supporter (no donation necessary) and share the link on facebook, twitter, google+, email, wherever!  Spreading the word will not only build support for my trip, for this film – but for these girls as well!  As more people become educated about this issue, the more people will get involved, and the more likely CHANGE will come!!

Nepal

More than anything, please pray for our team, the film, and especially for the women and girls who’s stories we hope to tell.  Here are some ways you can pray for us:

  • Pray for the safety of our team as we travel, especially during our time in India, and for the week I will be in Kathmandu with only one other woman from the team.
  • Pray for unity, vision, and opportunity.  Pray that God would open doors, and that we would meet many people who would be willing to share their stories with us.
  • Pray for the thousands and thousands of young Nepali girls and women who are enslaved in a life of prositution and torture.  Pray for the end of slavery in our time.
  • Pray for the young women who have been rescued out of their enslavement – for healing and restoration, and for their future as they learn to live again.

Nepalese Girls walking in a field

Thank you!

If you have any questions about the project, or my work, or about sex trafficking, or anything – please let me know!  Thank you so much for your support!  I am so blessed to be able to be a part of this project – and I literally could not do it without all of you and your support!!  THANK YOU!

Nepal

If you’d like more information about the trip – visit my fundraising page or contact me directly!

If you’d like to see more of my images from our first trip to Nepal, visit our album on Facebook.  Please note that due to the subject matter of our work, I have tried my best not to include images of girls and women that I know have been exploited, unless they have given us permission. Many of the girls we met have been recused from the RISK of exploitation and those are many of the faces you see here.

Spring Mini-Sessions — Saturday, May 11th

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 Spring is here!  The trees out my window are budding, the daffodils are popping up and soon my whole yard will smell like lilacs!!  I CANNOT WAIT!!!  There’s something about 60 degree days that make me want to drive around with my windows down, listen to the Cranberries, and go for Ben & Jerry’s ice cream – haha, itmust have something to do with high school!  ;)

Arnold Arboretum family portrait session

To celebrate the dawn of Spring, I thought we’d do another round of portrait Mini Sessions, just in time for Mother’s Day!  Sessions will be 15 minutes long and can include any number of people. Our selection of the best images will be edited and posted online for ordering prints, canvases & gifts.  Sessions cost $125, and will be held outdoors if possible (location near Woburn MA TBD based on mud & greenery conditions :)

Engagement Session in Boston Public Garden

It’s a great chance to get your Headshots, Family Portraits, Newborn Portraits, Maternity Portraits, Engagement Portraits, Senior Portraits, New Puppy Portraits, or any other kind of portraits you can dream of, done!

Beacon Hill family portrait session

Maternity Portrait Session

Family Reunion Photos

Boston Public Garden Engagement Session

Spring family portrait session at Horn Pond

 Leave a comment below, sign up on Facebook, or send an email to kg@kristaphoto.com to reserve your spot now!!  Don’t forget to invite your friends!!

Mourning for Boston

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I’ve thought a lot about this photo since yesterday afternoon.  Thinking about how many of my friends had been RIGHT THERE just a few minutes or hours before.  Thinking about the shoot I did at the candy store that’s right next to the site of the first bombing.  Thinking about how it could have been just about anyone I know who was injured or killed yesterday, and how thankful I am that it wasn’t.  Thinking about how much worse it could have been, and what a blessing it is that so many first responders were in the area who probably saved many many lives.  And I’ve been praying for everyone involved – those who were hurt, the people who’s loved ones died, the emergency workers and photographers who witnessed so much horror, and the thousands of bystanders who are traumatized by the terror it caused.  It’s just so horrible.

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We are grieving and praying for our city.

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The Spirit of the Sovereign Lord is on me,
because the Lord has anointed me
to proclaim good news to the poor.
He has sent me to bind up the brokenhearted,
to proclaim freedom for the captives
and release from darkness for the prisoners,
to proclaim the year of the Lord’s favor
and the day of vengeance of our God,
to comfort all who mourn,
and provide for those who grieve in Zion—
to bestow on them a crown of beauty
instead of ashes,
the oil of joy
instead of mourning,
and a garment of praise
instead of a spirit of despair.
They will be called oaks of righteousness,
a planting of the Lord
for the display of his splendor.

Isaiah 61:1-4

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Shout for joy, you heavens;
rejoice, you earth;
burst into song, you mountains!
For the Lord comforts his people
and will have compassion on his afflicted ones.

Isaiah 49:13

Boston State Room Wedding

…my soul is downcast within me.

Yet this I call to mind
and therefore I have hope:

Because of the Lord’s great love we are not consumed,
for his compassions never fail.
They are new every morning;
great is your faithfulness.
 I say to myself, “The Lord is my portion;
therefore I will wait for him.”

Lamentations 3:19-20

Winter Boston Engagement Session

The Lord is my shepherd, I lack nothing.
He makes me lie down in green pastures,
he leads me beside quiet waters,
he refreshes my soul.
He guides me along the right paths
for his name’s sake.
Even though I walk
through the darkest valley,
I will fear no evil,
for you are with me;
your rod and your staff,
they comfort me.

You prepare a table before me
in the presence of my enemies.
You anoint my head with oil;
my cup overflows.
Surely your goodness and love will follow me
all the days of my life,
and I will dwell in the house of the Lord forever.

Psalm 23

Boston Skyline at night from the Taj

praying.

So, you want to be a Wedding Photographer?

 So, you want to be a Wedding Photographer, huh? Do you really? I mean REALLY? Do you have any idea what you’re getting into?! I think the world of blogs and facebook and pinterest has left everyone thinking that the life of a wedding photographer is a all glamorous and fabulous. Well, it’s about to get really real up in here…

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Being a Wedding Photographer is HARD!  It’s a long hard road of spending a lot more money than you’d ever imagine on gear and computers and hard drives and software and taxes and health insurance and on and on. It’s often accompanied by debt and low pay and lots of stress.  It’s a complete lack of security, and never really knowing what next year, or next month will really look like.  It’s also about 4-8 hours of work at a computer PER HOUR OF SHOOTING for every wedding. It’s emails, and culling, and editing, and uploading, and meetings, and album design, and answering a million questions from brides and vendors and photographers and random strangers who want to know how to use their camera. And did I mention emails? There’s a lot of those.  It’s also being your own IT department, your own bookkeeper, your own HR rep, and it averages about a hundred random decisions every day that YOU are responsible to make.  And for all of that work, all of those responsibilities, the average wedding photographer will make less than they’d make working at Starbucks.  Often a lot LESS.

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Don’t get me wrong, it’s also getting to be creative, and capturing beautiful moments at fun weddings with great people!!  Those moments can sometimes occur in 95% humidity or 15 degree wind chill, involve shooting for 12 hours straight and never getting to go to the bathroom, standing on your feet with a back-breaking amount of gear strapped to your body for hours at a time, setting up family portraits – aka, herding cats, and handling the pressure of attempting to achieve perfection for your clients so the day they’re enjoying will always be remembered joyously. And while it is occasionally ditching work to go to the beach on a Wednesday – it’s more often working til midnight, and missing all sorts of fun things in the summer because you’re working every Saturday, and stressing out over the Christmas Season trying to get images ready for clients instead of “getting into the holiday spirit.”  Photographers make a lot of sacrifices to do what we love!

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See, you have to really love this to want to do it more than, hmmm, let’s say a year. I mean LOVE IT. You have to LOVE the look on a bride’s face when she sees her soon-to-be-husband for the first time on their wedding day. You have to love wedding reception music, and the craziness of a jam-packed dance floor, and you sometimes have to love drunk people (they are kind of hilarious really). You have to love hearing 1 Corinthians 13 again and again, and Best Man toasts, and watching Father-Daughter Dances. You have to love getting to know people, and enjoy being a part of something so special to them. You have to love light, and see the potential for beauty everywhere.  You have to LOVE putting a rectangular frame around these beautiful moments, and challenging yourself to make that rectangle something breath-taking.  You need to love it, or you REALLY SHOULD NOT DO IT for a living!!

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Every day, hundreds of people start up a Facebook Page and declare themselves to be “professional photographers.”  But it takes more to be a Wedding Photographer than a prosumer DSLR and a Facebook Page. This way of doing things is kind of like installing a light in your house, and hanging up a shingle over your door declaring yourself an electrician. The thing is, it’s not true.  It’s just not that easy.  Occasionally, people will email me asking for advice because they want to get into Wedding Photography and they want to do it well. These people are a step ahead of the rest because they recognize that they don’t entirely know what they’re doing, yet. There’s a sense of humility that recognizes that what we do is difficult and important and there’s a lot to learn [and there is ALWAYS a lot to keep learning].  I got one of those emails last week and I thought I’d share a bit of my advice here and let as many people in on it as I can.

See, I think picking up a camera and agreeing to shoot someone’s wedding is a big deal.  And if you don’t know what you’re doing – your putting those people’s memories at risk. [And those people are the ones taking the risk hiring you, but that’s a post for another time]  Most people shoot their first wedding for a friend, or a friend of a friend – because really who else would trust you to do it?  My old boss always used to say, “Friends don’t let friends shoot their weddings.” (Unless they’re an experienced pro).  Shooting someone else’s wedding for the first time is very nerve-wracking. It’s a lot of pressure, and it should be, it’s their wedding and the photos are super important to them.  Nothing will ruin a friendship faster than shooting a friend’s wedding when you’re not ready to do so, and doing a bad job or not delivering what they expected.   You might do a good job, but most photographers’ first weddings aren’t anything to brag about (you’ll see mine if you keep reading ;).  So, here are my suggestions for how to prepare yourself before you attempt to shoot your first wedding…

 

INVEST IN AN EDUCATION –

Real World Experience. Going to school for photography isn’t an option for everyone, and isn’t always the best option for people. I didn’t go to school for photography! What I did and what I recommend most is to find a great photographer or a few great photographers to assist.  Think of it like apprenticing – learning from real life experience can be the best education you can get! Offer up your “services” for free the first couple of times because really you’re going to be as much work for them as you’ll do for them. Offer to carry their gear and follow them around at a couple of weddings because you want to learn, and you recognize that you could learn a lot from them. Bring your own camera, but only shoot if/when they say it’s ok. And ask them if you could use the images you shoot for your website/fb page/blog. They will likely not let you (I wouldn’t), but that’s not the point. The point is to get experience and to see what it’s really like. No matter what you think it’s like, it’s different. It’s harder. And no matter how many weddings you’ve been to or been in, you can’t start seeing it like a Wedding Photographer until you’re standing in their shoes, or right next to them. Anticipating what’s coming, and knowing what’s important, and being technically ready to capture it all takes time. Let the first wedding you shoot be someone else’s responsibility. Be the one who get’s to shoot with all of the access and none of the fear/responsibility/consequences. I take a limited number of weddings each year, and Miss Amy is going to get to assist at most of mine this year so she can learn for herself what weddings are like!  But there are a ton of great photographers out there – so find some who’s work you love and who you’d like to shoot like, and reach out to them!  You never know until you try!

When I started, I KNEW I didn’t know anything.  I’d never taken a single class, and though I had an SLR, I didn’t really know how to use it.  I went looking for a photographer who would let me work for them and learn from them.   My first job in photography was with Steven Gross at Real Life Weddings in Chicago.  When I met with Steven the very first time – he flipped through my “portfolio” [read, book of terrible 8×10 prints blown up at the kiosk at CVS where you scan your 4x6s and make enlargements… sigh.] and said “well, clearly you don’t know anything, but you have a good eye.”  Haha!  I started working for Steven almost exactly 11 years ago. I swept floors, and cut film, and made espressos, and entered data, and all sorts of exciting things like that before he even took me to my first wedding. When he did, I only got to attend the reception, but he let me shoot as much as I wanted, and gave me all sorts of great tips throughout the night. Later he reviewed my film with me and gave me great feedback. I learned SO much from that one wedding! Though, to be fair, my 2nd and 3rd weddings I shot even worse than I had on my first. Like, I literally don’t have any images from them because there was nothing scan-worthy in the bunch. I have a few faves from my first wedding ever that I’m willing to share…. You ready for this?! Krista Guenin “wedding photographer” circa 2002:

nothing in this photo is in focus, yet it was in my portfolio the first couple of years…

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again, not really in focus, but in my portfolio

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Oh the cake was truly amazing… but my composition is boring!

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Everyone’s favorite shot from my early portfolio… but now I’m wondering why I cropped off the stems of the glasses

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um, OVEREXPOSE much? I clearly didn’t know how to use a flash yet.

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Yep, out of focus (I’d say that’s the #1 problem with new photographers, with not knowing how to use a flash in the running as well)

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This is actually my favorite photo from my early days as a wedding photographer. It’s still in my black & white film portfolio. This only proves that ANYONE can get ONE good shot from a wedding.

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I think Real World Experience is a MUST if you want to shoot weddings. There is nothing that will prepare you quite like being there!

 

Classes & Workshops.  Along with real world experience, there are all sorts of classes, seminars & workshops you can take  that will be a big help in preparing you. Here are some Workshops & Courses I’d recommend in the Boston area:

Inspire Photo Retreats – I plan Inspire each year with a small group of friends, it’s awesome – definitely worth the investment & the 3 days off work (since you clearly won’t have quit your job yet to become a photographer if you haven’t even shot a wedding yet – we can talk more about that another time ;)

Kickstart Your Wedding Season – event coming up on April 24th in Boston put on by Photo Nights Boston with lots of great speakers!

Lighting Workshops with Doug Levy – this one’s on flash – HIGHLY recommend!

My girl Carla Ten Eyck is an awesome teacher!

Creative Live provides online courses on all sorts of subjects, often free if you’re watching live

CDIA in Waltham has a good program, as does NESOP in Boston

You can also come to monthly photographers’ gatherings right here in Woburn – the Boston PUG (Pictage User Group – but you don’t have to be a member of Pictage and they’re FREE!)

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Also, READ all you can on the subject, educate yourself. Here are some great blogs/websites to get you started:

Tips for Wedding Photographers – written by my lovely friends Kate & Leah!

Strobist – all you ever wanted to know about flash and more

The Photo Life – great resource from the fabulous team at Pictage

Clickin Moms – not just for Moms ;)

Photo Love Cat – great resource from my friend Anne

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Invest in Professional Equipment –

You probably shouldn’t shoot a wedding with a digital rebel, or a Nikon D7000. I mean, you technically can, but if you’re getting paid like a pro you should be able to shoot like a pro. Invest in a great camera body (or rather TWO great camera bodies because not having back-up gear is another huge risk that could ruin someone’s wedding) and a couple of excellent lenses. A great camera body to start with would be the Nikon D600 or the D800 if you can swing it (heck if you’ve got enough dough, get the D4!).  You also NEED a professional off-camera flash, and you need to know how to use it. A pop-up flash is going to result in pretty bad photos, and the bulk of most weddings happen indoors at night during the reception, so flash is a critical skill (see Doug Levy workshop above).  I’ve put together a little list of some great Nikon options to start with here.  It’s a real investment, make no mistake about it!  But you can buy used gear (a D700 would be great!) from ebay and keh – especially for lenses.

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After you get the camera equipment, you also will need memory cards to shoot everything on, get twice what you think you’ll need.  You’ll need a fast computer to edit the images on, and the right software, not to mention the extra hard drives for storing and backing up all of your images.  An iMac, Lightroom, Photoshop, and a Drobo might be a good start, and another huge investment.

Work like a legitimate business

– Contract –  You also need to have a contract between you and the couple outlining your expectations for payment, what they will receive, what rights are being transferred & protected, and what the limitations are.  Ideally, you’d have this contract reviewed by a lawyer.  You can also buy templates online here or get a free one here.

– Communication – Before the wedding, be sure to go through the plan for the day with the clients and find out exactly what is important to them. When you’re not experienced, you don’t know what’s important to them (and sometimes even when you are experienced you can’t know it all!) – so find out. Find out what they’re going to be looking for when they see the proofs, and what they’re going to be devastated if they don’t see it, and then you better be sure to shoot it!  Most brides don’t even realize what was important to them until after they don’t see it, but you’ll be off to a good start if you at least get what she asks for!  In particular, you want a list of formal portrait combinations.

– Edit –  Once you shoot, you’ll have way too many photos and many of them will be terrible (many of ours are still terrible – people blink and talk and move and you can’t nail the shot every time!).  Go through the images and only keep the GREAT ones!  A great software for culling images is PhotoMechanic.  Then you’ll want to color correct the images so they look awesome – try using Lightroom, or you can outsource the color correction to a company like ShootDotEdit.

– Proofing – How are you going to show them the images when you’re finished editing?  Are you going to only give them a DVD of the files, or a thumb drive?  Or do you want to sell prints also?  If you’d like to sell prints, find a proofing company like PictageSmugMug, or Zenfolio, etc.

Sales Tax –  If you accept money to shoot a wedding and provide the clients ANY tangible products, including a disc of images, they owe sales tax on the entire shoot (at least that’s the case in MA, and most other states). And it is your responsibility to collect it and give it to the government.  My friend Kristen has an awesome site called Nifty Knowledge Rocks where she offers all sorts of guides for sales tax in all sorts of states.

My friend Joe offers business consulting specifically for photographers, so you can check him out here and he’ll be a huge help to you to get started on the right foot!

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Look, I started in weddings with NO experience and a totally crappy camera! But, this job is more important and more difficult than most people realize, in part because every hobbiest with a dslr puts up a facebook page and claims to be a photographer. It’s actually a lot more complicated than that. It’s an investment. It’s a risk. It’s a ton of work and a relatively big responsibility [I know we’re not curing cancer, or holding anyone’s lives in our hands – just their memories].  And it’s not for everyone who likes to take photos. Some people should just let it remain a hobby and enjoy it for the fun of it instead of trying to make a career out of it!  The wedding photography industry needs more people to know that before they come into our field. New people have a real tendency to jump into it and end up doing a lot of damage to their clients, their friends, themselves, and our entire industry. I absolutely hate seeing that happen!  I worked for 4 years for someone else, learning how to shoot weddings and run a business, and I am STILL constantly learning how to do it better. My suggestions are by no means the only way to do things, but these are the things I’ve learned through my own experiences.  I’m a big fan of learning from other people’s mistakes and experiences as much as possible!

I would love to hear your thoughts and answer your questions if you have any!  Leave a comment below and let me know what you think – but keep it friendly ;)

The Badi Girls

When I began looking for my first job in photography over 10 years ago, I wasn’t even thinking about wedding photography.  I wanted to be a photojournalist.  I wanted to travel the world and take “important” photographs that changed the way people thought about the world.

Funeral in Zimbabwe

What actually happened was that the first person who would hire me was a wedding photographer.  At the time, his work was like nothing I’d ever seen before – it was like a combination of photojournalism, fine art black & white film, and weddings all rolled into one.  So, I dove in head first and started learning all about wedding photography.  But that itch to document the hard things of this world has never left me.  I’ve travelled to many countries on missions trips with my church, and as a photographer on behalf of non-profit organizations, and captured all that I saw and experienced.  And still, I’ve wanted more.

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It’s been over four years since my last trip, and my heart has literally ached for another opportunity.  Then, just a couple of weeks ago, I got this email from my friend Grant who lives in Singapore:

“Hey Krista,  What does your calendar look like in November? How about a trip to Nepal…”

He sent me to the website for the Lighthouse Foundation, where I read about the Badi Girls.  Nepal is primarily Hindu and holds to the caste system, in which the Badi people are the lowest of the low, the lowest of even the Untouchables.  And though they are “untouchable,” the only way most families can even survive is to offer up their daughters as prostitutes.  I read the testimonies of two young girls who had been drugged, sold to brothels, forced into prostitution, severely beaten, and eventually escaped and came to live in the Lighthouse orphanages.  And with tears streaming down my cheeks I realized that I had no choice but to go and do the only thing I really can do – photograph this story.  Grant started a company called Code Red Films and will be organizing the trip, and gathering a crew to go into Nepal and shoot a documentary about the Badi Girls.  I am honored to be invited to work on the project as the still photographer, and completely overwhelmed at the thought of what this experience will be like.  So, in just a few weeks, I’ll be heading to Singapore, then Nepal to spend 2 weeks meeting and photographing these girls.  I have no doubt that it will be an incredibly difficult, and gut-wrenching project, but somehow I’m still excited that we are tackling it and I can’t wait to see what God will do with this!

Code Red Films (i.e. Grant) is financing this project with funds donated by people from all over the world.  Please consider supporting our efforts by donating either directly to Code Red Films, or to Krista Photography.  None of the donations are tax deductible, but they will be greatly appreciated and used directly towards expenses associated with the film (plane tickets, travel within Nepal, post-production, etc.).  Also all GIVE Program donations will be directed towards this project for all weddings booked within the next 2 months.  If you’d like to re-direct your GIVE donation to this project, but have already booked, please let me know before your wedding!  And if you are a praying person, please pray for this project!  Pray for us as we form a team, and a plan, and for our safety and the safety of everyone who participates and helps us along the way!

I’m looking forward to keeping you updated on this project over the coming weeks and months!!  THANK YOU so much for supporting us in this project!!

And now, introducing our first Associate Photographer!!

COCO!

Averie & Keith

If you haven’t noticed by now, I have the best Assistant EVER!  CoCo Boardman has been working for me for almost exactly two years.  Before moving to Boston, she worked all over the country as a news photographer, and even worked as an Assistant at Real Life Weddings, where I got my start in photography.  So, she basically came to me already knowing a lot about how I work because she was trained by the woman who I trained… sounded good to me!  And she’s been even better than I expected.  She’s so good at assisting me at weddings, that I barely remember how I ever did it without her!  She reads my mind and stays so on top of the ball, I can’t tell you how helpful she is!  She’s become not just my office assistant, but Studio Manager, photo editor, album designer, sounding board, and perspective generator.  And add to that, she’s a fabulous photographer and she adds so much to every wedding she assists and second shoots!  See… she’s pretty amazing!  And Krista Photography is a better business, a better place to work, and a better team because of her.

So, even though she already does so much around here, it’s time for her to get to do a little more!!  Starting in 2013, Krista Photography will now offer weddings shot by CoCo Boardman, our first Associate Photographer!!  She has the experience and the talent to shoot weddings of her own.  And while I’ll miss having her with me at every wedding I shoot, I’m excited to see her grow as a photographer, and to give brides the opportunity to work with her!

So, if you haven’t met her yet, take a minute and get to know our new Associate, CoCo!

She’s a babe…

All Things Lovely - de sous les decombres

And a goofball…

Averie & Keith

She likes to dance, dance, dance, dance…

Lillian & Colin - wedding shoot

She’s a snazzy dresser…

And she’s a great friend!

She also shoots Canon, but we don’t hold it against her…

Fall Wedding at Gibbet Hill

…because she uses it for good and not evil!  Check out some of my favorites of her work!

Wedding at the Hilton Boston Logan

Spring Wedding in Cambridge

Spring Wedding in Cambridge

Shots by Coco

Shots by Coco

Shots by Coco

Shots by Coco

Shots by Coco

Shots by Coco

Shots by Coco

Shots by Coco

Shots by Coco

Shots by Coco

Shots by Coco

Pictures by Coco Boardman

Pictures by Coco Boardman

Shots by Coco

CoCo, I love you lady!  I’m so thankful for you and all you’ve done to help me over the last two years!  I’m so very excited to what comes next!!  You rock :)

If you’d like to view more of CoCo’s work, you can see it in MANY of our albums on Facebook, but especially here, and soon we’ll have her galleries on our website as well!  Yay!

 

Katelyn & Evan’s Wedding Details

Just wanted to share some of my favorite details from Katelyn & Evan’s wedding at Granite Links!  Between Katelyn’s TWO amazing dresses and the gorgeous flowers – this wedding was just beautiful!!

Katelyn wrapped a family rosary and bracelet around her bouquet. Well, technically, I wrapped them around the bouquet. Sometimes I need to multi-task. Still, I love personal touches like that at weddings! Sometimes it’s the little details that no one else sees that mean the most.

Wedding at the Granite Links Golf Club

Shoes for Dress #1

Wedding at the Granite Links Golf Club

Wedding at the Granite Links Golf Club

Shoes for Dress #2… I love how different they are!

Wedding at the Granite Links Golf Club

The rings

Wedding at the Granite Links Golf Club

Dress #1 of 2… Monique Lhuillier lace magnificence!!

Wedding at the Granite Links Golf Club

Wedding at the Granite Links Golf Club

I love grey suits for the guys!

Wedding at the Granite Links Golf Club

It was such a pretty color scheme for the flowers!

Wedding at the Granite Links Golf Club

Wedding at the Granite Links Golf Club

Wedding at the Granite Links Golf Club

Granite Links is great venue

They had an A Capella group perform before the ceremony – it was such a cool treat!

Cocktail Hour details

The tables were beautiful

And how fabulous is this cake?!

Wedding at the Granite Links Golf Club

Dress #2 – amazing detail work!

Wedding at the Granite Links Golf Club

Some of the fabulous vendors who made this wedding so beautiful:

Wedding Dresses  –  Monique Lhuillier

Rings  –  Tiffany’s

DJ  –  Allstar Entertainment & UpLighting

Videography  –  Jeff Brouillet Films

Makeup  –  Andrea at The Makeup Artists

Event Planning & Design  –  PBD Events

Flowers  –  Studio One Twenty Three

xoxo